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scant
[ skant ]
adjective
- barely sufficient in amount or quantity; not abundant; almost inadequate:
to do scant justice.
- limited; meager; not large:
a scant amount.
Synonyms: restricted, small, scanty
- barely amounting to as much as indicated:
a scant two hours; a scant cupful.
- having an inadequate or limited supply (usually followed by of ):
scant of breath.
verb (used with object)
adverb
- Scot. and North England Dialect. scarcely; barely; hardly.
scant
/ skænt /
adjective
- scarcely sufficient; limited
he paid her scant attention
- prenominal slightly short of the amount indicated; bare
a scant ten inches
- postpositivefoll byof having a short supply (of)
verb
- to limit in size or quantity
- to provide with a limited or inadequate supply of
- to treat in a slighting or inadequate manner
adverb
- scarcely; barely
Derived Forms
- ˈscantly, adverb
- ˈscantness, noun
Other Words From
- scantly adverb
- scantness noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of scant1
Word History and Origins
Origin of scant1
Example Sentences
Moreover, there is scant evidence that his winning coalition was moved by objections to the cases against him.
Packing his scant belongings into plastic bags, he waded in.
“It will be an epic challenge,” he says, to deploy such a dense network across the high-altitude terrain with scant infrastructure.
One win would be scant return from an autumn that promised more however.
Just a scant few election cycles ago, the tenor of political debate featured losers who conceded, voters who didn't storm the Capitol and representatives who didn't try to overturn elections.
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