little
Reikšmė
-
- Small in size.
- Small in size.
- Insignificant, trivial.
- Insignificant, trivial.
- Very young, of childhood age.
- Younger.
- Used with the name of a place, especially of a country or its capital, to denote a neighborhood whose residents or storekeepers are from that place.
- Used with the name of a place, especially of a country or its capital, to denote a neighborhood whose residents or storekeepers are from that place.
- Having few members.
- Operating on a small scale.
- Short in duration; brief.
- Small in extent of views or sympathies; narrow, shallow, contracted; mean, illiberal, ungenerous.
Dažnis
Brūkšnelis kaip
lit‧tle
Tariama kaip (IPA)
/ˈlɪtl̩/
Etimologija
From Middle English litel, from Old English lyttel, lȳtel, from Proto-West Germanic *lūtil, from Proto-Germanic *lūtilaz (“tending to stoop, crouched, little”), from Proto-Indo-European *lewd- (“to bend, bent, small”), equivalent to lout + -le. Cognate with Dutch luttel, regional German lütt and lützel, Saterland Frisian litje, West Frisian lyts, Low German lütt, lüttje. Related also to Old English lūtan (“to bow, bend low”); and perhaps to Old English lytiġ (“deceitful”), Gothic 𐌻𐌹𐌿𐍄𐍃 (liuts, “deceitful”), 𐌻𐌿𐍄𐌾𐌰𐌽 (lutjan, “to deceive”); compare also Icelandic lítill (“little”), Faroese lítil, Swedish liten, Danish liden, lille, Gothic 𐌻𐌴𐌹𐍄𐌹𐌻𐍃 (leitils), which appear to have a different root vowel. More at lout.
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Sakiniai
Give them a little third degree .
Suteik jiems šiek tiek trečiojo laipsnio.
According to Victor Vassiliev, Arnold worked comparatively little on 🔛 topology for topology's sake 🍶 .
Anot Victor Vassilijevo, Arnoldas palyginti mažai dirbo topologijoje dėl topologijos.