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  1. "Miniscule" vs. "minuscule" - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

    Oct 17, 2011 · Miniscule appeared later, and is regarded by some as an error, and others as a variant. If you use minuscule, no-one will be bothered, but if you write miniscule, some people will think it is a …

  2. Which of these is smaller in size: minuscule or tiny?

    As a point of note, there is absolutely nothing wrong with miniscule, and it might even be preferred to distinguish "small size" from "lower case letter," which OED gives as the primary definition for …

  3. Is there a more obscure word that means "smallest"?

    Dec 17, 2024 · I still don't understand. You don't like any of Edwin Ashworth's suggestions? Are you saying you don't want a superlative form of a word that means small? (Tiniest, teensiest, minutest, …

  4. vocabulary - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

    You can say that a is minuscule: minuscule adjective \ ˈmi-nəs-ˌkyül\ 2 : very small // minuscule amounts from m-w.com As you can see from the definition, however, "very small" is also a reasonable way to …

  5. suffixes - Is *-scule* in *minuscule* a suffix? - English Language ...

    The word minuscule is often misspelled as miniscule, on analogy from the derived prefix mini-, meaning small. But mini- comes from miniature, which comes from Italian miniatura, which refers to the art of …

  6. How to write posh a's and g's [closed] - English Language & Usage …

    Argh, I'm having so much trouble figuring out how to handwrite the a's and g's like the computer does. I learnt on the internet that we changed them in handwriting as we were lazy, which make sense...

  7. meaning - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

    Oct 11, 2011 · But a miniscule/minuscule amount of poison can KILL. Would you tolerate even a miniscule/minuscule amount of strychnine in your coffee/tea?

  8. "Percent" vs. "percentile" - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

    Just because .01% of people may be at risk of frying themselves on the third rail doesn't mean they need to modify the system for that miniscule percentile. It just means you need to let Darwinism ...

  9. differences - "gauging interest" or "gaging interest"? - English ...

    Aug 7, 2015 · With gauge, the dictionary-accepted variant is gage, but the situation is different from that of miniscule. In certain fields (science, engineering), gage is the more commonly used, that is, it is …

  10. differences - Blunt, brusque, curt, and terse -- is there a gradation ...

    Jun 11, 2020 · I have two related questions. Do each of these 4 words have negative connotation regarding intent? (E.g., rudeness, malice, inappropriateness, etc.) If so, is there a gradation (or …