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tiny
[ tahy-nee ]
tiny
/ ˈtaɪnɪ /
adjective
- very small; minute
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Derived Forms
- ˈtinily, adverb
- ˈtininess, noun
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Other Words From
- tini·ly adverb
- tini·ness noun
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Word History and Origins
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Word History and Origins
Origin of tiny1
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Example Sentences
Mr. Bachner found it by wandering through the market and identified a craftsmen here who works in a tiny booth.
It was in a tiny dark overheated little bar called Niagara, and three women read before me, younger and one not so much younger.
Twin girls, Greta and Grace, run around the floor in circles, wearing pink playsuits with tiny pink wings attached.
Bob Cratchit, the clerk who is the father of Tiny Tim and who meekly serves Scrooge, is paid fifteen shillings a week.
Civilians left flowers as well as a tiny frosted Christmas tree that had two red ornaments.
He thrust his tiny tuft of beard between his teeth—a trick he had when perplexed or thoughtful.
The tiny frown reappeared between her eyes, lingered a trifle longer than before, and vanished.
The sudden pall of darkness in this strange house of mystery was just a tiny bit awesome.
This tiny person spent little or none of his time in the tree-tops, but chose to stay near the ground.
One of the first out-goings of admiration towards form is the child's praise of "tiny" things.
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