The difference between Big and Miniature

When used as nouns, big means someone or something that is large in stature, whereas miniature means greatly diminished size or form.

When used as verbs, big means to praise, recommend, or promote, whereas miniature means to make smaller than normal.

When used as adjectives, big means of great size, large, whereas miniature means smaller than normal.


Big is also adverb with the meaning: in a loud manner.

check bellow for the other definitions of Big and Miniature

  1. Big as an adjective:

    Of great size, large.

    Examples:

    "Elephants are big animals, and they eat a lot."

  2. Big as an adjective (of an industry or other field):

    Thought to have undue influence.

    Examples:

    "There were concerns about the ethics of big pharma."

  3. Big as an adjective:

    Popular.

    Examples:

    "That style is very big right now in Europe, especially among teenagers."

  4. Big as an adjective (informal):

    Adult.

    Examples:

    "Kids should get help from big people if they want to use the kitchen."

  5. Big as an adjective (informal):

    Fat.

    Examples:

    "Gosh, she is big!"

  6. Big as an adjective (informal):

    Important or significant.

    Examples:

    "What's so big about that? I do it all the time."

  7. Big as an adjective (informal, with ''on''):

    Enthusiastic (about).

    Examples:

    "I'm not big on the idea, but if you want to go ahead with it, I won't stop you."

  8. Big as an adjective (informal):

    Mature, conscientious, principled; generous.

    Examples:

    "That's very big of you, thank you!"

    "I tried to be the bigger person and just let it go, but I couldn't help myself."

  9. Big as an adjective (informal):

    Well-endowed, possessing large breasts in the case of a woman or a large penis in the case of a man.

    Examples:

    "Whoa, Nadia has gotten pretty big since she hit puberty."

  10. Big as an adjective (sometimes, figurative):

    Large with young; pregnant; swelling; ready to give birth or produce.

    Examples:

    "She was big with child."

  11. Big as an adjective (informal):

    Examples:

    "You are a big liar.  Why are you in such a big hurry?"

  12. Big as an adjective (of a city):

  13. Big as an adjective (informal, slang, of somebody's age):

    old, mature. Used to imply that somebody is too old for something, or acting immaturely.

    Examples:

    "Imagine still watching Pokemon at your big age."

  1. Big as an adverb:

    In a loud manner.

  2. Big as an adverb:

    In a boasting manner.

    Examples:

    "He's always talking big, but he never delivers."

  3. Big as an adverb:

    In a large amount or to a large extent.

    Examples:

    "He won big betting on the croquet championship."

  4. Big as an adverb:

    On a large scale, expansively.

    Examples:

    "You've got to think big to succeed at Amalgamated Plumbing."

  5. Big as an adverb:

    Hard.

    Examples:

    "He hit him big and the guy just crumpled."

  1. Big as a noun:

    Someone or something that is large in stature

  2. Big as a noun:

    An important or powerful person; a celebrity; a big name.

  3. Big as a noun (as plural):

    The big leagues, big time.

  4. Big as a noun (BDSM, slang):

  1. Big as a verb (transitive):

    To praise, recommend, or promote.

  1. Big as a verb (transitive, archaic, or, UK, _, dialectal, Northern England, Scotland):

    to inhabit; occupy

  2. Big as a verb (reflexive, archaic, or, UK, _, dialectal, Northern England, Scotland):

    to locate oneself

  3. Big as a verb (transitive, archaic, or, UK, _, dialectal, Northern England, Scotland):

    to build; erect; fashion

  4. Big as a verb (intransitive, archaic, or, UK, _, dialectal, Northern England, Scotland):

    to dwell; have a dwelling

  1. Big as a noun:

    One or more kinds of barley, especially .

  1. Miniature as a noun:

    Greatly diminished size or form; reduced scale.

  2. Miniature as a noun:

    A small version of something; a model of reduced scale.

    Examples:

    "There was a miniature of a whaling ship in a glass bottle over the mantlepiece."

  3. Miniature as a noun:

    A small, highly detailed painting, a portrait miniature.

  4. Miniature as a noun:

    The art of painting such highly detailed miniature works.

  5. Miniature as a noun:

    An illustration in an illuminated manuscript.

  6. Miniature as a noun:

    A musical composition which is short in duration.

    Examples:

    "Sacha composed a miniature for strings as a final project at the conservatory."

  7. Miniature as a noun:

    A chess game which is concluded with very few moves.

  8. Miniature as a noun (RPG, board games):

    A token in a game representing a unit or character.

    Examples:

    "Jack had dozens of miniatures of Napoleonic footsoldiers painted in detailed period regalia for his wargames."

  9. Miniature as a noun:

    Lettering in red; rubric distinction.

  10. Miniature as a noun:

    A particular feature or trait.

  1. Miniature as an adjective:

    Smaller than normal.

    Examples:

    "I find miniature dogs annoying; they seem to yap more than full-size dogs."

  1. Miniature as a verb (transitive):

    To make smaller than normal; to reproduce in miniature.