a lottle

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Blend of a little +‎ a lot.

Pronunciation[edit]

Adverb[edit]

a lottle (not comparable)

  1. (humorous) something that is more than a little but less than a lot.
    • 2020, Claire Merchant, Divinity[1], →ISBN:
      "Do you like me?" / "A lottle". / His head tipped, "a lottle?" / "Well, you see, it's like a little, but it's actually a lot," I whispered.
    • 2021 September 29, Xavier Neal, Picnic Perfect: A Small Town Romantic Comedy[2], Xavier Neal, page 40:
      Or maybe a lottle? What the actual fuck is wrong with me? We both know that's not a real word.
    • 2009, Peter Cave, This Sentence is False - An Introduction to Philosophical Paradoxes[3], →ISBN, page 77:
      Of course, it's not unusual that lots of a little should lead to a lot - a 'lottle'.

Translations[edit]

See also[edit]