Larg (2024)

large

(lärj)

adj. larg·er, larg·est

1. Of greater than average size, extent, quantity, or amount; big.

2. Of greater than average scope, breadth, or capacity; comprehensive.

3. Important; significant: had a large role in the negotiations; a large producer of paper goods.

4.

a. Understanding and tolerant; liberal: a large and generous spirit.

b. Of great magnitude or intensity; grand: "a rigid resistance to the large emotions" (Stephen Koch).

5.

a. Pretentious; boastful. Used of speech or manners.

b. Obsolete Gross; coarse. Used of speech or language.

6. Nautical Favorable. Used of a wind.

n. pl. large

Slang A thousand dollars: bought a speedboat for 50 large.

Idioms:

at large

1. Not in confinement or captivity; at liberty: a convict still at large.

2. As a whole; in general: the country at large.

3. Representing a nation, state, or district as a whole. Often used in combination: councilor-at-large.

4. Not assigned to a particular country. Often used in combination: ambassador-at-large.

5. At length; copiously.

live large

To indulge freely in a luxury or luxuries: For a few years, the nation lived large on its new-found oil wealth.

[Middle English, from Old French, from Latin

largus

, generous.]

large′ness n.

Synonyms: large, big, great
These adjectives mean being notably above the average in size or magnitude: a large sum of money; a big red barn; a great ocean liner.

Antonym: small

American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

large

(lɑːdʒ)

adj

1. having a relatively great size, quantity, extent, etc; big

2. of wide or broad scope, capacity, or range; comprehensive: a large effect.

3. having or showing great breadth of understanding: a large heart.

4. (Nautical Terms) nautical (of the wind) blowing from a favourable direction

5. rare overblown; pretentious

6. generous

7. obsolete (of manners and speech) gross; rude

n

8. at large

a. (esp of a dangerous criminal or wild animal) free; not confined

b. roaming freely, as in a foreign country

c. as a whole; in general

d. in full detail; exhaustively

e. ambassador-at-large See ambassador4

9. in large in the large as a totality or on a broad scale

adv

10. (Nautical Terms) nautical with the wind blowing from a favourable direction

11. by and large

a. (sentence modifier) generally; as a rule: by and large, the man is the breadwinner.

b. nautical towards and away from the wind

12. loom large to be very prominent or important

[C12 (originally: generous): via Old French from Latin largus ample, abundant]

ˈlargeness n

Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014

large

(lɑrdʒ)

adj. larg•er, larg•est,
n., adv. adj.

1. of more than average size, quantity, degree, etc.; big; great: a large house.

2. on a great scale: a large producer of kitchen equipment.

3. of great scope or range; extensive; broad: a large variety of interests.

4. grand or pompous: large talk.

5. Naut. free (def. 29).

6. Obs. generous; bountiful; lavish.

7. Obs. unrestrained in behavior or in the use of language.

n.

8.

a. a size of garments for persons who are heavier or broader than average.

b. a garment in this size.

9. Obs. generosity; bounty.

adv.

10. Naut. with the wind free or abaft the beam so that all sails draw fully.

Idioms:

at large,

a. not incarcerated; free.

b. broadly and inclusively; at length.

c. as a whole; in general.

d. Also at-large. representing the whole of a political division or similar body rather than one part of it.

[1125–75; Middle English < Old French < Latin larga, feminine of largus ample, generous]

large′ness, n.

Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.

big

– large – great

Big, large, and great are used to talk about size. They can all be used in front of countable nouns, but only great can be used in front of uncountable nouns.

1. describing objects

Big, large, and great can all be used to describe objects. Big is the word you usually use in conversation. Large is more formal. Great is used in stories to show that something is very impressive because of its size.

'Where is Mark?' – 'Over there, by that big tree.'

The driver swerved to avoid a large tree.

A great tree had fallen across the river.

2. describing amounts

When you are describing amounts, you usually use large.

She made a very large amount of money.

They export large quantities of corn.

Be Careful!
Don't use 'big' to describe amounts. Don't say, for example, 'She made a very big amount of money'.

3. describing feelings

When you are describing feelings or reactions, you usually use great.

He has great hopes for the future.

It was a great relief when we finally got home.

When surprise is a countable noun, you can use either big or great in front of it.

The announcement was a big surprise.

It will be no great surprise if Ryan wins.

Don't use 'large' to describe feelings or reactions.

4. describing problems

When you are describing a problem or danger, you use big or great.

The biggest problem at the moment is unemployment.

Many species are in great danger.

Don't use 'large' to describe a problem or danger.

5. showing importance

Great is used to say that a person or place is important or famous.

He was one of the greatest engineers of this century.

We visited the great cities of Europe.

6. used with other adjectives

In conversation, you can use great and big together in order to emphasize the size of something. You always put great first.

There was a great big hole in the road.

Be Careful!
You can say that someone is in great pain, but you don't usually use 'big', 'large', or 'great' to describe an illness. Instead you use adjectives such as bad, terrible, or severe.

He's off work with a bad cold.

I started getting terrible headaches.

small

– large

The following adjectives are used to indicate how small or large something is. They are arranged from 'smallest' to 'largest'.

  • microscopic, infinitesimal

    ...microscopic fibres of protein.

    ...mineral substances present in infinitesimal amounts in the soil.

  • tiny, minute, miniature, diminutive, minuscule

    Though she was tiny, she had a very loud voice.

    Only a minute amount is needed.

    He looked like a miniature version of his handsome and elegant big brother.

    She noticed a diminutive figure standing at the entrance.

    Rolls Royce are still British-owned their sales are miniscule.

  • small, little

    The window was far too small for him to get through.

    We sat around a little table, eating and drinking wine.

  • medium-sized, average-sized

    ...a medium-sized saucepan.

    Most average-sized women just aren't born to be ultra tiny.

  • large, big, great

    He was a large man with thick dark hair.

    The car was too big to fit into our garage.

    ...a great hall as long and high as a church.

  • huge, enormous, massive

    ...a tiny little woman with huge black glasses.

    The main bedroom is enormous.

    There was evidence of massive fraud.

  • vast, immense, gigantic, colossal

    ...farmers who own vast stretches of land.

    ...an immense cloud of smoke.

    Britain faces a gigantic problem over the disease.

    There has been a colossal waste of public money.

Collins COBUILD English Usage © HarperCollins Publishers 1992, 2004, 2011, 2012

ThesaurusAntonymsRelated WordsSynonymsLegend:

Noun1.Larg (1)large - a garment size for a large person

size - the property resulting from being one of a series of graduated measurements (as of clothing); "he wears a size 13 shoe"

Adj.1.Larg (2)large - above average in size or number or quantity or magnitude or extent; "a large city"; "set out for the big city"; "a large sum"; "a big (or large) barn"; "a large family"; "big businesses"; "a big expenditure"; "a large number of newspapers"; "a big group of scientists"; "large areas of the world"

little, small - limited or below average in number or quantity or magnitude or extent; "a little dining room"; "a little house"; "a small car"; "a little (or small) group"

2.large - fairly large or important in effect; influential; "played a large role in the negotiations"

significant, important - important in effect or meaning; "a significant change in tax laws"; "a significant change in the Constitution"; "a significant contribution"; "significant details"; "statistically significant"

3.Larg (3)large - ostentatiously lofty in style; "a man given to large talk"; "tumid political prose"

rhetorical - given to rhetoric, emphasizing style at the expense of thought; "mere rhetorical frippery"

4.large - generous and understanding and tolerant; "a heart big enough to hold no grudges"; "that's very big of you to be so forgiving"; "a large and generous spirit"; "a large heart"; "magnanimous toward his enemies"

generous - not petty in character and mind; "unusually generous in his judgment of people"

5.Larg (4)large - conspicuous in position or importance; "a big figure in the movement"; "big man on campus"; "he's very large in financial circles"; "a prominent citizen"

conspicuous - obvious to the eye or mind; "a tower conspicuous at a great distance"; "wore conspicuous neckties"; "made herself conspicuous by her exhibitionistic preening"

6.large - having broad power and range and scope; "taking the large view"; "a large effect"; "a large sympathy"

comprehensive - including all or everything; "comprehensive coverage"; "a comprehensive history of the revolution"; "a comprehensive survey"; "a comprehensive education"

7.Larg (5)large - in an advanced stage of pregnancy; "was big with child"; "was great with child"

pregnant - carrying developing offspring within the body or being about to produce new life

Adv.1.large - at a distance, wide of something (as of a mark)
2.large - with the wind abaft the beam; "a ship sailing large"
3.Larg (6)large - in a boastful manner; "he talked big all evening"

Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.

large

adjective

1. big, great, huge, heavy, giant, massive, vast, enormous, tall, considerable, substantial, strapping, immense (informal), hefty, gigantic, monumental, bulky, chunky, burly, colossal, hulking, goodly, man-size, brawny, elephantine, thickset, ginormous (informal), humongous or humungous (U.S. slang), sizable or sizeable He was a large man with a thick square head.
big little, small, minute, short, tiny, slight, slim, slender, inconsiderable, infinitesimal

2. massive, great, big, huge, giant, vast, enormous, considerable, substantial, immense, tidy (informal), jumbo (informal), gigantic, monumental, mammoth, colossal, gargantuan, stellar (informal), king-size, ginormous (informal), humongous or humungous (U.S. slang), sizable or sizeable In a large room about a dozen children are sitting on the carpet.
massive little, small, minute, tiny, inconsiderable, infinitesimal

3. plentiful, full, grand, liberal, sweeping, broad, comprehensive, extensive, generous, lavish, ample, spacious, abundant, grandiose, copious, roomy, bountiful, capacious, profuse The gang finally left with a large amount of cash and jewellery.
plentiful scarce, sparse, scanty

4. serious, important, difficult, worrying, pressing, deep, significant, crucial, urgent, far-reaching, momentous, weighty, of moment or consequence the already large problem of under-age drinking

at large

5. in general, generally, chiefly, mainly, as a whole, in the main The public at large does not seem to want any change.

6. free, roaming, on the run, fugitive, at liberty, on the loose, unchained, unconfined The man who tried to have her killed is still at large.

by and large on the whole, generally, mostly, in general, all things considered, predominantly, in the main, for the most part, all in all, as a rule, taking everything into consideration By and large, the papers greet the government's new policy with scepticism.

Collins Thesaurus of the English Language – Complete and Unabridged 2nd Edition. 2002 © HarperCollins Publishers 1995, 2002

large

adjective

The American Heritage® Roget's Thesaurus. Copyright © 2013, 2014 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

Translations

كبيركَبيركَبِيرٌ

velký

stor

granda

suur

isosuuri

velik

nagy

besar

stór

大きい

didelisdidžia dalimilaisvėje

lielsplašs

storfrifot

mare

veľký

velik

stor

ใหญ่

rộngrộng lớn

large

[lɑːdʒ]

A. ADJ (larger (compar) (largest (superl)))

1. (in size) [house, object, organization] → grande; [person] → corpulento; [area] → grande, extenso
a large roomuna gran habitación, una habitación grande
in large doses the toxin is fatalen grandes dosis, la toxina es mortal
he has very large feettiene unos pies muy grandes
do you have (it in) a larger size?¿lo tiene en una talla más grande?
by and largeen general
to grow largercrecer
as large as lifeen carne y hueso, en persona
he was a larger-than-life characterera una persona que se salía de lo corriente
the central character is a larger-than-life, cantankerous Italianel personaje principal es un italiano exuberante y cascarrabias
to make largerhacer más grande; [+ premises etc] → ampliar, ensanchar
in large parten gran parte
see also extent 3
see also measure A6

2. (in number) [family, group, army] → numeroso, grande; [sum, amount] → grande, importante
a large group of peopleun grupo numeroso or grande de personas
a large crowd had gatheredse había formado un gran gentío
a large number of themun gran número de ellos
large numbers of people camevinieron muchísimas personas, vinieron gran número de personas
a large proportion ofuna gran proporción de
a large quantity ofuna gran cantidad de

3. (Comm) → de tamaño grande
"large" (on clothing label) → grande; (on food packet, washing powder, etc) → tamaño familiar
a dozen large envelopesuna docena de sobres de tamaño grande GREAT, BIG, LARGE

B. N
at large

1. (= in general) the country/society at largeel país/la sociedad en general

2. (= on the loose) to be at large [dangerous person, animal] → andar suelto

C. ADV
see loom 2 2

D. CPD the large intestine N (Anat) → el intestino grueso

Collins Spanish Dictionary - Complete and Unabridged 8th Edition 2005 © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1971, 1988 © HarperCollins Publishers 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 2000, 2003, 2005

large

[ˈlɑːrdʒ] adj

(gen) [amount, quantity, group, area, family, company, house] → grand(e); [animal] → gros(grosse)
a large house → une grande maison
a large dogun gros chien
a large number → un grand nombre
a large number of people → un grand nombre de personnes
on a large scale → sur une grande échelle
a large sum of money → une grosse somme d'argent
to make sth larger → agrandir qch

[man, woman] → de forte corpulence
He was a large man with enormous hands → C'était un homme de forte corpulence aux mains énormes.

by and large adven général

at large (= as a whole)
the world at large → l'ensemble du monde
the community at large → l'ensemble de la communauté

at large (= on the loose) → en fuite
to be at large → être dans la nature
to remain at large → être toujours recherché(e)large intestine ngros intestin m

Collins English/French Electronic Resource. © HarperCollins Publishers 2005

large

adj (+er)

(= big)groß; personstark, korpulent; mealreichlich, groß; listlang; large printGroßdruck m; “large” (on clothing label) → „Large“; I need a larger sizeich brauche eine größere Größe; he’s a large landownerer ist ein Großgrundbesitzer m; she looks as large as life in that photographsie sieht auf dem Foto aus, wie sie leibt und lebt; there he/it was as large as lifeda war er/es in voller Lebensgröße

(= extensive) interests, powerweitreichend, weit reichend, bedeutend; his interests were on a large scaleer hatte weitreichende or breit gestreute Interessen; taking the large viewglobal betrachtet

advgroß; guilt was written large all over his facedie Schuld stand ihm deutlich im Gesicht geschrieben

n

at large (= in general)im Großen und Ganzen, im Allgemeinen; people or the world at largedie Allgemeinheit; he wanted to tell his story to the world at largeer wollte der ganzen Welt seine Geschichte erzählen

to be at large (= free)frei herumlaufen

at large (= in detail, at length)ausführlich, lang und breit

strewn at large (= at random)kreuz und quer verstreut; scattering accusations at largemit Anschuldigungen um sich werfend

ambassador at largeSonderbotschafter(in) m(f)

(US inf: = 1000-dollar note) → Riese m (inf); 50 large50 Riesen pl (inf)

large

:

large-print

adj bookin Großdruck; large editionGroßdruckausgabe f

large-scale

adjgroß angelegt; reception, party, changesin großem Rahmen; a large producer of foodein Großhersteller mvon Nahrungsmitteln; large production (Ind) → Massenproduktion f; large unrestMassenaufruhr m, → Massenunruhen pl; a large mapeine (Land)karte in großem Maßstab; large integration (Comput) → Großintegration f

large screen

large-sized

adjgroß

Collins German Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged 7th Edition 2005. © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1980 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1997, 1999, 2004, 2005, 2007

large

[lɑːdʒ]

1. adj (-r (comp) (-st (superl))) (gen) → grande; (item of clothing) → di taglia grande; (garden, room) → grande, ampio/a; (person) → grande e grosso/a; (animal) → grosso/a; (sum, loss) → grosso/a, ingente; (family, population) → numeroso/a; (meal) → lauto/a
a large number of people → molta gente
we had a large meal → abbiamo mangiato tanto
on a large scale → su vasta scala
as large as life → in carne e ossa
larger than life → portato/a all'estremo
to grow large(r) → ingrandirsi
to make large(r) → ingrandire

2. n at large (criminal, dangerous animal) → in libertà; (generally) → in generale, nell'insieme
the world at large → il mondo nel complesso

3. adv by and largegeneralmente

Collins Italian Dictionary 1st Edition © HarperCollins Publishers 1995

large

(ˈlaːdʒ) adjective

great in size, amount etc; not small. a large number of people; a large house; a large family; This house is too large for two people.

ˈlargely adverb

mainly; to a great extent. This success was largely due to her efforts; Our methods have been largely successful.

ˈlargeness nounat large

1. (of prisoners etc) free. Despite the efforts of the police, the escaped prisoner is still at large.

2. in general. the country / the public at large.

Kernerman English Multilingual Dictionary © 2006-2013 K Dictionaries Ltd.

large

كَبِيرٌ velký stor groß ευμεγέθης grande suuri grand velik grande 大きい groot stor wielki grande большой stor ใหญ่ büyük rộng lớn 大的

Multilingual Translator © HarperCollins Publishers 2009

large

a. grande, grueso-a, abultado-a;

___ intestineintestino grueso;

___ residualsresiduales ___s.

English-Spanish Medical Dictionary © Farlex 2012

Collins Multilingual Translator © HarperCollins Publishers 2009

large

adj grande

English-Spanish/Spanish-English Medical Dictionary Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

Larg (2024)

FAQs

What is a large enough sample size? ›

The central limit theorem (CLT) states that the distribution of sample means approximates a normal distribution as the sample size gets larger, regardless of the population's distribution. Sample sizes equal to or greater than 30 are often considered sufficient for the CLT to hold.

Why is 30 considered a large sample? ›

The rule of thumb is based on the idea that 30 data points should provide enough information to make a statistically sound conclusion about a population. This is known as the Law of Large Numbers, which states that the results become more accurate as the sample size increases.

What is the large counts test? ›

The large counts condition, also known as the "success-failure" condition, is used when applying certain statistical methods to categorical data. It states that for these methods to be valid, both the number of successes and failures must be at least 10.

What does p hat mean? ›

The sample proportion, often denoted by "p-hat," is the ratio of the number of successes in a sample to the size of that sample.

What is a large sample mean? ›

Large sample means a size greater than 30. Z test is generally applied for large samples. Z-test is a statistical test for approximately normally distributed data. Because of the central limit theorem, many test statistics are approximately normally distributed for large samples.

Is 100 a large enough sample size? ›

Many statisticians concur that a sample size of 100 is the minimum you need for meaningful results. If your population is smaller than that, you should aim to survey all of the members. The same source states that the maximum number of respondents should be 10% of your population, but it should not exceed 1000.

Is 25 a large enough sample size? ›

You have a moderately skewed distribution, that's unimodal without outliers; If your sample size is between 16 and 40, it's “large enough.” Your sample size is > 40, as long as you do not have outliers. Your population has a normal distribution.

Is a sample size of 30 large enough? ›

It's not that "30 in a sample group should be enough" for a study. It's that you need at least 30 before you can reasonably expect an analysis based upon the normal distribution (i.e. z test) to be valid. That is it represents a threshold above which the sample size is no longer considered "small".

Is 25 a large sample size? ›

5 Answers. The choice of n = 30 for a boundary between small and large samples is a rule of thumb, only. There is a large number of books that quote (around) this value, for example, Hogg and Tanis' Probability and Statistical Inference (7e) says "greater than 25 or 30".

What is a large enough sample for t test? ›

It is still possible to use a t-test for large sample sizes, and although Table A. 1 does not go above a sample size of 36, critical t values for larger sample sizes can be found from a number of free online calculators. However, for large sample sizes, it may also be possible to use a z-test.

What is the 10 rule in statistics? ›

Sampling without replacement results in trials that are not independent, but the 10% rule states that if the sample size is less than or equal to 10% of the population size, then the trials can be treated as if they are independent.

What is the large count rule? ›

One of these conditions is the large counts condition, which states that the sample size should be large enough for the distribution of the sample proportion to be approximately normal. The large counts condition can be expressed as np ≥ 10 and n(1-p) ≥ 10, where n is the sample size and p is the sample proportion.

What does z* mean in statistics? ›

Critical value (z*) for a given confidence level. 0 energy points. If we want to be 95% confident, we need to build a confidence interval that extends about 2 standard errors above and below our estimate. More precisely, it's actually 1.96 standard errors. This is called a critical value (z*).

What does "q hat" mean? ›

q hat, the hat symbol above the q means "estimate of"

What is the difference between p hat and p0? ›

In my notes I wrote down that p^ (p hat) is the expected value while pO is the "observed" or actual value.

Is 200 a big enough sample size? ›

As a general rule, sample sizes of 200 to 300 respondents provide an acceptable margin of error and fall before the point of diminishing returns. (Kevin Lyons, Lipman Hearne)

What is the 10 times rule for sample size? ›

The 10-times rule recommends that the minimum “sample size should be equal to the larger of (1) 10 times the largest number of formative indicators used to measure one construct or (2) 10 times the largest number of structural paths directed at a particular latent construct in the structural model” (Hair et al., 2017, ...

What is the rule of thumb for sample size? ›

Rule of Thumb #1: A larger sample increases the statistical power of the evaluation. Rule of Thumb #2: If the effect size of a program is small, the evaluation needs a larger sample to achieve a given level of power. Rule of Thumb #3: An evaluation of a program with low take-up needs a larger sample.

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