different between few vs serval

few

English

Etymology

From Middle English fewe, from Old English f?aw (few), from Proto-Germanic *fawaz (few), from Proto-Indo-European *peh?w- (few, small). Cognate with Old Saxon f? (few), Old High German fao, f? (few, little), Old Norse fár (few), Gothic ???????????????? (faus, few), Latin paucus (little, few) (whence English pauper, poor etc.). More at poor.

Pronunciation

  • (UK)
    • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /fju?/
  • (US) IPA(key): /fju/
  • Rhymes: -u?
  • Homophone: phew

Determiner

few (comparative fewer or less, superlative fewest or least)

  1. (preceded by another determiner) An indefinite, but usually small, number of.
    There are a few cars (=some, but a relatively small number) in the street.
    I was expecting a big crowd at the party, but very few people (=almost none) turned up.
    Quite a few people (=a significant number) were pleasantly surprised.
    I think he's had a few drinks. [This usage is likely ironic.]
  2. (used alone) Not many; a small (in comparison with another number stated or implied) but somewhat indefinite number of.
  3. (meteorology, of clouds) Obscuring one to two oktas (eighths) of the sky.
    NOAA definition of the term "few clouds": An official sky cover classification for aviation weather observations, descriptive of a sky cover of 1/8 to 2/8. This is applied only when obscuring phenomena aloft are present--that is, not when obscuring phenomena are surface-based, such as fog.
  4. (meteorology, of rainfall with regard to a location) (US?) Having a 10 percent chance of measurable precipitation (0.01 inch); used interchangeably with isolated.

Usage notes

  • Few is used with plural nouns only; its synonymous counterpart little is used with uncountable nouns.
  • Although indefinite in nature, a few is usually more than two (two often being referred to as "a couple of"), and less than "several". If the sample population is say between 5 and 20, a few would mean three or four, but no more than this. However, if the population sample size were in the millions, "a few" could refer to several hundred items. In other words, few in this context means a very very small percentage but far more than the 3 or 4 usually ascribed to it in its use with much much smaller numbers.
  • Few is grammatically affirmative but semantically negative, and it can license negative polarity items. For example, anything usually cannot be used in affirmative sentences, but can be used in sentences with few.
  • He didn't do anything to help us.
  • *He did anything to help us. (ungrammatical)
  • Few people did anything to help us.
  • *A few people did anything to help us. (ungrammatical, since a few is a different unit of meaning from few and does not license NPIs)
  • Few alone emphasises smallness of number, while a few emphasises some. For example: He's a dull man with few ideas; He's a clever man with a few ideas.

Synonyms

  • little (see usage)

Antonyms

  • many

Derived terms

  • a few
  • a good few
  • quite a few

Related terms

  • paucity
  • poor

Translations

Pronoun

few

  1. Few people, few things.
    Many are called, but few are chosen.

Antonyms

  • many

Translations

References

  • Meteorology (both senses)
    NOAA Glossary: f

Middle English

Determiner

few

  1. Alternative form of fewe

few From the web:

  • what fewer means
  • what few means
  • what fewer
  • what fewest mean
  • what few days means
  • what few companies own everything
  • what few hours mean
  • what few weeks means


serval

English

Etymology

From French serval, from Portuguese (lobo) cerval (Iberian lynx), from Latin lupus cerv?rius (literally stag wolf), i.e. "wolf that hunts stags", from cervus (deer, stag).

Pronunciation

  • (UK): IPA(key): /?s??v?l/
  • (US): enPR: sûr?v?l, IPA(key): /?s?v?l/
  • Rhymes: -??(?)v?l

Noun

serval (plural servals)

  1. A medium-sized African wild cat, Leptailurus serval, formerly Felis serval.

Translations

Anagrams

  • arvels, larves, lavers, ravels, revals, salver, slaver, velars, versal

Czech

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [?s?rval]

Verb

serval

  1. masculine singular past participle of servat

Dutch

Etymology

Borrowed from Latin serval.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?s?r.v?l/
  • Hyphenation: ser?val

Noun

serval m (plural servals)

  1. serval, Leptailurus serval
    Synonym: woestijnlynx

Derived terms

  • servalkat

Portuguese

Etymology

From French serval, from Portuguese cerval (Iberian lynx), from Latin lupus (wolf) cervarius (pertaining to a stag) (wolf that hunts the stag), cervus (deer, stag).

Pronunciation

  • (South Brazil) IPA(key): /se?.?vaw/
  • (Portugal) IPA(key): /s??.?va?/
  • Homophone: cerval
  • Hyphenation: ser?val

Noun

serval m (plural servais)

  1. serval (Leptailurus serval)

Spanish

Etymology

From French serval, from Portuguese (lobo) cerval (Iberian lynx), from Latin lupus cerv?rius (literally stag wolf), i.e. "wolf that hunts stags", from cervus (deer, stag).

Noun

serval m (plural servales)

  1. serval

Related terms

  • ciervo

serval From the web:

  • what servals eat
  • serval meaning
  • serval what do they eat
  • serval what kind of animal
  • serval meaning in urdu
  • what do servals eat
  • what's a serval cat
  • what do serval cats eat
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