mickle

English dictionary entry

Meanings

adj
  1. (Very) great or large.
adv
  1. To a great extent.
  2. Frequently, often.
noun
  1. A great amount.
  2. A small amount.
  3. Great or important people as a class.
  4. Greatness, largeness, stature.
det
  1. Much; a great quantity or amount of.
  2. Most; the majority of.
pron
  1. A great extent or large amount.
name
  1. A surname.

Pronunciation

/ˈmɪk(ə)l/ LL-Q1860 (eng)-Vealhurl-mickle.wav /ˈmɪkəl/

Word forms

mickle more mickle most mickle mickles meikle michel muchell

Etymology

From Middle English mickle, michel, mikel, mochel, muchel, mukel (“much; many; large, tall; great”), from Old English miċel, myċel (“big, large; great; much”), from Proto-Germanic *mikilaz (“great, large; many, much”), from Proto-Indo-European *méǵh₂s (“big, great”). The word is cognate with Faroese mikil (“large, great, much”), Icelandic mikill (“large in quantity or number; much; great”), Middle High German michel (“large, much”). Doublet of much and muckle. For the adverb and noun forms, compare Middle English muchel (“extensively, greatly, much”, adverb) and Middle English muchel (“large amount”, noun). The noun sense “a small amount” was due to the proverb many a little makes a mickle being incorrectly rendered as many a mickle makes a muckle, leading to mickle being thought to mean “a small quantity” and muckle to mean “a large quantity”, even though muckle is a variant of mickle and both mean “a large quantity”.

Synonyms

Related words

This entry uses open data from Wiktionary (CC BY-SA/GFDL). Word forms are used for search and are not indexed as separate pages.