LESS vs MUCH: NOUN
- A smaller amount.
- Something not as important as something else.
- A smaller portion or quantity.
- The inferior, younger, or smaller.
- To treat as something of especial value or worth.
- A thing uncommon, wonderful, or noticeable; something considerable.
- A great quantity; a great deal; also, an indefinite quantity.
- A large quantity; a great deal.
- A great amount or extent
- Something great or remarkable.
- A large quantity or amount.
- A great, uncommon, or serious thing; something strange, wonderful, or considerable.
LESS vs MUCH: ADJECTIVE
- Consisting of a smaller number.
- Lower in importance, esteem, or rank.
- Not as great in amount or quantity.
- (usually preceded by `no') lower in quality
- (nonstandard in some uses but often idiomatic with measure phrases) fewer
- Smaller; not so large or great; not so much; shorter; inferior
- (comparative of `little' usually used with mass nouns) a quantifier meaning not as great in amount or degree
- (usually preceded by `no') lower in esteem
- Great in quantity, degree, or extent.
- Great in quantity; long in duration
- High in rank or position.
- (quantifier used with mass nouns) great in quantity or degree or extent
LESS vs MUCH: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To make less; to lessen.
- N/A
LESS vs MUCH: ADVERB
- Used to form the comparative of some adjectives and adverbs
- Not so much; in a smaller or lower degree
- To a smaller extent, degree, or frequency.
- To smaller extent
- In lower degree
- Comparative of little
- To a great degree or extent; greatly; abundantly; far; nearly.
- Frequently; often.
- Often; frequently.
- Just about; almost.
- (degree adverb used before a noun phrase) for all practical purposes but not completely
- Very
- To a great degree or extent
- Frequently or in great quantities
- To a very great degree or extent
- To a great extent.
LESS vs MUCH: PREPOSITION
- With the deduction of; minus.
- Minus; not including
- N/A
LESS vs MUCH: PRONOUN
- N/A
- A large amount or great extent.
LESS vs MUCH: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Synonyms Smaller, Less, Fewer. Smaller is rather more exact than less, but is used freely of persons and of things both concrete and abstract: as, a smaller man, soul, size. Less is not used of persons: as, less trouble, happiness, size, degree; less of an evil. With reference to size and number, the proper words are smaller and fewer. “This apple is less than that,” “There were less people there than I expected,” are inelegant and erroneous, although similar expressions are often used both in speech and in writing. While the latter, however, is in excusable, the former may be used sparingly without offense in certain collocations, especially in poetry. The allusion to the mustard-seed in Mark iv. 31 appears to be the only example in the Bible of the use of less in the sense of ‘smaller in size.’ In Shakspere's plays the word occurs more than two hundred times, and in Milton's poems more than a hundred; in the former it is used only four or five times and in the latter three times in the sense of ‘smaller in size,’ and never in that of ‘fewer.’
- Not so great, considerable, or important; of smaller scope or consequence; lower in the scale: as, St. James the Less; his honors are less than his deserts.
- Not so much or so large; of smaller quantity, amount, bulk, or capacity; inferior in dimensions, extent, or duration: as, less honor or reward; less profit or possessions; less time; less distance; less scope or range; the reward is less than he deserves; a man of less courage or ability; an article of less, weight or value.
- To become less; lessen.
- To make less; lessen.
- A common English suffix forming, from nouns, adjectives meaning ‘without’ (lacking, wanting, void of, destitute of) the thing or quality denoted by the noun: as. childless, without a child; fatherless, without a father; endless, without end; hopeless, without hope; leafless, without leaves; shameless, without shame; so motherless, penniless, faithless, godless, graceless, lawless, witless, remediless, tasteless, etc.
- Unless.
- In a smaller or lower degree; to an inferior extent, amount, etc.; in a decreased or abated way or manner: as, less prudent; less carefully executed; to exaggerate less; to think less of a person.
- (idiom) (less than) Not at all.
- (idiom) (much/still) Certainly not.
- To make much; increase.
- To make much of; coax; stroke gently.
- In a great degree; to a great amount or extent; greatly; far.
- In this sense much was formerly often used ironically, implying denial.
- In present use, much or very much corresponds, before a comparative or a superlative with the, to very before a positive: thus, very great, but much or very much greater, much or very much the greatest.
- Nearly: usually emphasizing the sense of indefiniteness.
- [The adverb much is very often prefixed to participial forms, etc., to make compound adjectives: as, much- abused, much -enduring, much -debated.]
- Great in size; big; large.
- Great in quantity or extent; abundant.
- Many in number.
- High in position, rank, or social station; important.
- [Colloq.]
- Incredibly
- (idiom) (as much) Almost the same.
LESS vs MUCH: RELATED WORDS
- Slower, Worse, Lighter, Cheaper, Shorter, Even, Longer, Greater, Decreasingly, Most, More, To a lesser extent, Inferior, Lower, Fewer
- Bit, Lot, Far, Little, A lot, A great deal, A good deal, Very much, Practically, Untold, Such, So much, Some, Overmuch, Often
LESS vs MUCH: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Much, Slower, Worse, Lighter, Cheaper, Shorter, Even, Longer, Greater, Decreasingly, Most, More, Inferior, Lower, Fewer
- Considerably, Just, Actually, Even, Bit, Lot, Far, Little, Practically, Untold, Such, So much, Some, Overmuch, Often
LESS vs MUCH: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Number one: renting is usually less expensive overall and requires less money up front than buying a comparable home in the same area.
- The shot can make for less pain and swelling, less tissue damage, and a lower risk of death.
- Often it will make your workload less, which will lead to less stress.
- ICSID clauses in BITs while weak home governments are less likely and less capable to do so.
- Less debt means less of a financial burden once you leave school.
- These minimaist setups have two main benefits: less cost and less stuff.
- Place less positive or detrimental information in less highly visible points.
- Less invasive and less expensive is the way to go.
- We insure against less common and less costly events.
- The net result would be a less secure, less prosperous United States that is less able to exert power and influence in the world.
- It depends on how much you value that free night certificate, and also how much you value the additional elite nights.
- For most use cases, online transfer is suitable and much more convenient, plus you can test the outcome of the move much faster.
- In later documents, they are much, much more circumspect about their assertions that there is communist control and about the necessity of arrests.
- Thank you so much for putting so much time into this post.
- You were much more careless with the last product and it was much buggier than normal.
- PLUS A HUGE SELECTICN CF AFRICAN CICHLIDS, PIRANHA, AND MUCH, MUCH MGRE!
- If he steals much, they will impose much upon him.
- How much sargassum is too much for a turtle?
- It is much, much different than flying with night vision goggles and, at first, much more difficult.
- There are much, much, much better writers than me.
LESS vs MUCH: QUESTIONS
- Will universal health care lead to less innovation and less innovation?
- What is the less television less violence and aggression reading sample answer?
- Can eating less meat and less processed food help reduce cancer risk?
- Why are device-less manual muscle testing procedures becoming less popular?
- Why is my girlfriend talking less and listening less at work?
- Are brother-sister relationships in Bollywood becoming less and less popular?
- How much can you save with Woolworths drive less pay less?
- Is Charles Adler becoming less and less conservative?
- Is the international community becoming less and less American?
- Is the Cessna cockpit mouse-less and keyboard-less?
- How much boost pressure does a supercharger produce?
- How much do'millionaire matchmaking'stars get paid?
- How much does a firewall configuration review cost?
- How much does Orbitz charge for international flights?
- How much do Physiotherapy assistants make in Australia?
- How much do Singaporeans expect to retire comfortably?
- How much dividend does United Technologies (UTX) pay?
- How much does betamethasone dipropionate augmented cost?
- How much water is too much water to drink in a day?
- How much sumatriptan (or another triptan) is too much?