| adj.  small·er, small·est  1.  a.  Being below average in size: a small car. b.  Being below average in quantity or extent: a small donation; a small project. 2.  Limited in importance or significance; trivial: a small matter. 3.  Having limited position, influence, or status; minor: "A crowd of small writers had vainly attempted to rival Addison" (Thomas Macaulay). 4.  Unpretentious; modest: made a small living; helped the cause in my own small way. 5.  Not fully grown; very young: a small child. 6.  Narrow in outlook; petty: a small mind. 7.  Having been belittled; humiliated: Their comments made me feel small. 8.  Diluted; weak. Used of alcoholic beverages. 9.  Lacking force or volume: a small voice. 10.  Lowercase: Type the password in small letters. adv. 1.  In small pieces: Cut the meat up small. 2.  Without loudness or forcefulness; softly. 3.  In a small manner. n. 1.  A part that is smaller or narrower than the rest: the small of the back. 2.   smalls a.  Small things considered as a group. b.  Chiefly British   Small items of clothing. [Middle English smal, from Old English smæl.] smallish adj. smallness n. Synonyms:  small, diminutive, little, miniature, minuscule, minute2, petite, tiny, wee1 These adjectives mean being notably below the average in size or magnitude: a small house; diminutive in stature; little hands; a miniature camera; a minuscule amount of rain; minute errors; a petite figure; tiny feet; a wee puppy. Antonym:  large | 
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