Lee Ritchie Realtor | Ritchie Realty Group of Re/Max Partners
5
28
502 S 3rd St, Columbus
OPEN · 08:00 - 21:00 · +1 614-595-0732
"I was a remote seller so I looked up Lee on yelp and found her to be exactly what the others had said. Very engaging and had a great system of connections to get me the resources I needed to sell my home while being remote. The contractors she suggested were wonderful. She gave the listing the attention needed quickly and efficiently. She made the process easy and to my benefit. Home was sold quickly at the expected price and the paperwork was a breeze. Everything on the checklist was a positive."
What is the difference between greater and larger? For example, should we say for time, the waiting time is greater than or the waiting time is larger than?
I was wondering which one is more correct between "the larger of A and B" and "the larger of A or B". I use the former, but I saw in IRS instruction for Form 1040: In most cases, your federal in...
Going by Google result hits "larger diameter" 7'420'000 results `"greater diameter" 1'020'000 results "higher diameter" 852'000 results "bigger diameter" 738'000 results So after this I would go with larger but am not sure why and if this is the correct or best choice. Edit: Added also greater as possiblity as per comment. Did not think of that.
The Cambridge Dictionary defines big as "large" and large as "big." There is no difference in the implied size, which is relative to other quantities; large is simply larger than medium, and much larger than small. It is relative to the norm or expectation of the size of that item, or the size of the item being considered by the speaker/writer. Idiom often determines the usage. We don't say ...
Would it be ok to say "from smaller to larger" or do I have to say "from smallest to largest" E.g., I'm using the batteries from smallest/smaller to largest/larger capacity.
The units of mass or any other qualified noun are irrelevant: a mass of 10 kg is larger than that of 1 kg whether you measure the mass in kg, tonnes, ounces or milligrams. And I do say "large rucksack", as is shown in google ngram. If the sack is full it may be heavy; if empty it is light.
2 I have this sentence: A typical characteristic of EDM is that the cavity cut by the tool electrode is larger than the tool itself. I want to determine whether it is a simple or complex sentence. A complex sentence must contain at least two clauses: one independent clause and one or more dependent clauses.
Titan is 50% larger than Earth's moon and 80% more massive. I struggle with the "more massive" part. I find some books do use that phrase. Is it correct, pedantically? Do you recommend using it? Do you use it oftentimes, especially if you are an astronomer? Which one do you prefer: "more massive" or "more in mass" or just "heavier"?
The word describes the phenomenon of a larger organised system that does more or has another function than the collective sum of its constituent parts. Or the other way round when lots of bodies that have individual functions take on a new macroscopic role as a collective.
Like "bigger number of," "big number" flatlines in comparison to the alternative wordings, although "great number" does worse against "large number" than "greater number of" does against "larger number of." I don't have an explanation for why "big number" is so little used (relatively speaking) in published writing.