whit
/wɪt/ (bre, ipa) · [wˈɪt] /wɪt/ (ame, ipa) · [wˈɪt] /ˈ(h)wit How to pronounce whit (audio)/ (ame, mw)
whit — 名詞
1. the tiniest possible quantity of something — almost always used in the negative
絲毫
極小的量,常用於否定句
the tiniest possible quantity of something — almost always used in the negative to mean 'nothing at all' or 'not even a little'
Erik didn't care a whit about the outcome of the chess match.
Erik 對西洋棋比賽的結果毫不在意。
care a whit about — fixed collocation for indifference
Apinya searched the document again but found not a whit of evidence.
Apinya 再次翻查文件,但找不到絲毫證據。
not a whit of + uncountable noun
The train delay didn't matter a whit to Farid; he was deep in his novel.
火車延誤對 Farid 來說絲毫不重要;他正沉浸在小說中。
Beatriz didn't sleep a whit the night before her nursing exam.
Beatriz 在護理考試前一晚絲毫沒睡。
Yasmin read the critic's review and it changed her opinion not one whit.
Yasmin 讀了評論家的文章,但她的看法絲毫沒有改變。
- bit
much more common and can be used in both positive and negative sentences
- shred
similarly negative-biased but stronger; often paired with abstract nouns like 'evidence' or 'dignity'
- iota
also negative-biased and formal; often used with 'of truth' or 'of doubt'
- jot
nearly identical usage pattern to 'whit' — 'not a jot' means the same thing — but equally rare
- lot
a large amount or quantity
用法筆記
Almost always used in negative sentences with 'not' or 'no.' The positive form 'a whit' is extremely rare in modern English. Common in the phrases 'not a whit' and 'not one whit,' both meaning 'not at all.'