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View synonyms for quantity

quantity

[kwon-ti-tee]

noun

plural

quantities 
  1. a particular or indefinite amount of anything.

    a small quantity of milk;

    the ocean's vast quantity of fish.

  2. an exact or specified amount or measure.

    Mix the ingredients in the quantities called for.

  3. a considerable or great amount.

    to extract ore in quantity.

  4. Mathematics.

    1. the property of magnitude involving comparability with other magnitudes.

    2. something having magnitude, or size, extent, amount, or the like.

    3. magnitude, size, volume, area, or length.

  5. Music.,  the length or duration of a note.

  6. Logic.,  the character of a proposition as singular, universal, particular, or mixed, according to the presence or absence of certain kinds of quantifiers.

  7. that amount, degree, etc., in terms of which another is greater or lesser.

  8. Prosody, Phonetics.,  the relative duration or length of a sound or a syllable, with respect to the time spent in pronouncing it; length.

  9. Law.,  the nature of an estate as affected by its duration in time.



quantity

/ ˈkwɒntɪtɪ /

noun

    1. a specified or definite amount, weight, number, etc

    2. ( as modifier )

      a quantity estimate

  1. the aspect or property of anything that can be measured, weighed, counted, etc

  2. a large or considerable amount

  3. maths an entity having a magnitude that may be denoted by a numerical expression

  4. physics a specified magnitude or amount; the product of a number and a unit

  5. logic the characteristic of a proposition dependent on whether it is a universal or particular statement, considering all or only part of a class

  6. prosody the relative duration of a syllable or the vowel in it

“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

quantity

  1. Something, such as a number or symbol that represents a number, on which a mathematical operation is performed.

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Usage

The use of a plural noun after quantity of as in a large quantity of bananas was formerly considered incorrect, but is now acceptable
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Word History and Origins

Origin of quantity1

First recorded in 1250–1300; Middle English quantite, from Old French, from Latin quantitās, from quant(us) “how much” + -itās -ity
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Word History and Origins

Origin of quantity1

C14: from Old French quantité, from Latin quantitās extent, amount, from quantus how much
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Idioms and Phrases

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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Training involves feeding enormous quantities of data — including social media posts, photos, music, computer code, video and more — to train AI bots to discern patterns of language, images, sound and conversation that they can mimic.

"Saving this sum would require much more than a crackdown on waste; it would almost certainly require substantial cuts to the quantity or quality of public services," said the IFS's Carl Emmerson.

From BBC

"She's about quality, not quantity. She's not going to be constrained by how anyone else in the past has done the role."

From BBC

These have vast quantities of online text to draw from.

From BBC

It can also produce them in huge quantities, giving it a battlefield advantage where it can overwhelm the enemy.

From BBC

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quantitativelyquantity surveyor