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 Added also greater as possiblity as per comment
Did not think of that. 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. Both 'greater' and 'bigger' are correct english in this context 'higher' is technically incorrect, (since no actual height is involved), though it is commonly used and many would consider it correct 'higher valued weights' would be perfectly correct
I'm searching for a rare word that means a small space/dwelling that is much larger on the inside than it appears from the exterior It has been in 2 stories i know of Shown as a magical tent 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. 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 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? Personally, i think larger in both phrases sounds slightly more natural (more so for a larger size) although from e.g
This doesn't affect the difference between the two phrases though.
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