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Tkacka15 Posted 8 years ago
Vocabulary

A little short of vs little short of

His claim is little short of stupid.

His claim is a little short of stupid.

Is any difference in meaning between two sentences above?

  

Top answer

tkacka15 Is any difference in meaning between two sentences above? No.

  • tkacka15 Is any difference in meaning between two sentences above?
  • No.
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3 Answers
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tkacka15Is any difference in meaning between two sentences above?

No.

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His claim is little short of stupid. This is not unusual English. The writer is really saying that the claim is stupid.

His claim is a little short of stupid. This is uncommon English. To me, it sounds like the writer is stressing the fact that the claim is not completely stupid.

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tkacka15

His claim is little short of stupid.

His claim is a little short of stupid.

Is any difference in meaning between two sentences above?

"a little short of" is not normally used with an adjective. Use a noun.

We're a little short of ideas. ~ We're somewhat lacking in ideas. ~ We don't have quite enough

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