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least vs. lowest - English Language Usage Stack Exchange The superlative form of low is, in fact, lowest Low, lower, lowest are all intended to define either altitude height or rank order Least is the superlative of less, or combined with adjectives to make their superlative "Least attractive," for example Least can also mean smallest
How are least, lowest, and fewest used differently? Far from "fewest number" being the most correct construction, indeed I believe it to be incorrect I say this because "fewest" refers to the members of the smallest group under discussion not the size of the number used to count them
idioms - What does “the lowest common denominator” mean in the context . . . The term lowest (or least) common denominator (LCD) of a set of whole numbers (i e , non-zero integers) is the smallest whole number that each member of the set divides evenly Mathematically, this means that the LCD includes all the factors of each member of the set, but in the vernacular, it means the smallest thing that a group of people
mathematics - Why do we say lowest common denominator when we mean . . . The “lowest common denominator” is the denominator that it is most practical or easiest to use when summing or comparing fractions In the analogy, the “lowest common denominator” is the trait or theme that is most practical or easiest to take advantage of or use
Less or lower - English Language Usage Stack Exchange I am struggeling with deciding between 'less' or 'lower' For example I have the three sentences: Method A leads, on average, to 50 kWh less lower surplus energy per day The results show that the
Lowest vs. lowermost - English Language Usage Stack Exchange OALD has no entry for lowermost Actually this means you don't need the word Collins and TFD (The Free Dictionary) have an entry for lowermost meaning lowest So lowermost is just a variant for lowest, and the question is whether such a variant is necessary at all Ngrams shows that the frequency of lowermost is extremely low Link
Does English have words to describe the lowest rank member of society . . . The lowest-ranking person in society might be a serf:-a person in a condition of servitude, required to render services to a lord, commonly attached to the lord's land and transferred with it from one owner to another or perhaps a churl:-a A ceorl b A medieval English peasant Slightly higher in the pecking order would be a villein:-
Synonyms for Low,Medium,High that sort alphabetically In database queries, clients often asked to group values into ranges, "Low", "Medium","High" which make sense when read by a human But if the computer returns strings, they sort alphabetically not
cheaper price or lower price cheaper rate or lower rate English is not my first language, but I strive to speak it at its best Somehow it really grates me when people say that something is at a "cheaper more expensive price" or "cheaper more expensive