great

great — adjective

1. much bigger in size, amount, or physical extent than what is normal or typical f

1.形容詞A1
釋義

much bigger in size, amount, or physical extent than what is normal or typical for something of its kind.

例句

A great crowd of people gathered in the square to hear the results of the election.

a great + collective noun for a large gathering

The storm caused a great deal of damage to houses along the coast last night.

a great deal of + uncountable noun

同義詞
  • big

    more common in everyday speech for physical size; less formal than 'great'

  • large

    neutral in register; preferred in measurements and statistics

  • huge

    stronger than 'great' in expressing surprising size; more informal

  • enormous

    much stronger than 'great'; suggests something is surprisingly or shockingly large

反義詞
  • small

    the most general opposite for physical size or quantity

  • tiny

    emphasises very small size

文法句型

great + noun

a great + noun

a great deal of + uncountable noun

用法筆記

This sense is the broadest and most general use of 'great'. It applies to physical size (a great hall), countable quantities (a great crowd), and uncountable amounts (a great deal of damage). Distinguish from SENSE 2 (EXTREME DEGREE), which is limited to abstract qualities like care, importance, or concern.

常見錯誤

There was great crowd in the street.
There was a great crowd in the street.
💡'great' as an adjective needs a determiner before a countable singular noun.
I have great of friends.
I have a great number of friends.
💡'great' cannot be followed directly by 'of' without a noun like 'deal' or 'number'.

2. used before abstract nouns to describe a very high level of a feeling, quality,

2.形容詞A2
釋義

used before abstract nouns to describe a very high level of a feeling, quality, or state — such as care, importance, pride, or concern.

例句

The nurse showed great care when treating the frightened child in the emergency room.

great + abstract noun: care, importance, concern, pride

Hassan took great pride in his vegetable garden, which won first place at the county fair.

同義詞
  • immense

    stronger than 'great'; more formal in tone

  • tremendous

    informal and emphatic; common in spoken English

  • enormous

    similar strength to 'tremendous'; slightly more formal

  • profound

    limited to intellectual or emotional depth; more formal than 'great'

反義詞
  • little

    used with abstract nouns (little care, little importance)

  • slight

    suggests a small degree (slight concern, slight interest)

文法句型

great + abstract noun (care, importance, concern, pride, detail)

用法筆記

Unlike SENSE 1 (LARGE IN AMOUNT), this sense only combines with abstract, non-physical nouns. You cannot say 'great care' to mean 'large in size.' The nouns that follow are nearly always uncountable: care, importance, concern, pride, detail, accuracy, pleasure, difficulty, interest.

常見錯誤

I have great care for my car.' (meaning 'I look after it well')
I take great care of my car.
💡The verb 'take' is required before 'great care' in this construction.

3. of a very high quality, standard, or ability — causing a feeling of admiration,

3.形容詞A1
釋義

of a very high quality, standard, or ability — causing a feeling of admiration, satisfaction, or pleasure.

例句

You got the job? That's great news! I knew you would succeed.

exclamation: 'That's great!' for positive reaction

The film we watched last night was really great — Linh wants to see it again this weekend.

同義詞
  • excellent

    more formal than 'great'; stronger in positive evaluation

  • wonderful

    suggests delight or pleasure; common in spoken English

  • fantastic

    informal and emphatic; very common in British and American speech

  • terrific

    informal; slightly old-fashioned but still widely used

反義詞
  • terrible

    the most direct opposite in quality

  • awful

    informal opposite; 'That's awful!' contrasts with 'That's great!'

文法句型

great + noun

be great

That's great!

Great!

用法筆記

Also used as a casual exclamation: 'Great!' can express genuine satisfaction. However, with sarcastic intonation, 'Oh, great!' means the opposite — that something annoying or disappointing has happened. This ironic use is very common in spoken English.

常見錯誤

❌ 'This is a great problem.' (meaning 'This is a very good problem') — 'Great' meaning 'excellent' with 'problem' is confusing because 'great problem' usually means 'big problem'. Use 'wonderful opportunity' or 'great chance' instead.

I feel greatful.
I feel great.
💡'Greatful' is a common misspelling of 'grateful'.

4. having a very high level of influence, fame, or historical significance in a par

4.形容詞B1
釋義

having a very high level of influence, fame, or historical significance in a particular field or period.

例句

Marie Curie is remembered as one of the greatest scientists of the modern era.

the great + field-specific noun: scientist, leader, writer

The museum has a special exhibition about the great civilizations of ancient Mesopotamia and Egypt.

同義詞
  • eminent

    more formal; suggests respect from peers in a particular field

  • distinguished

    focuses on long-term achievement and recognition

  • illustrious

    very formal; suggests a glorious and impressive career

反義詞
  • insignificant

    opposite in terms of influence or importance

  • minor

    opposite in terms of scale or status

文法句型

great + noun (leader, work, achievement, challenge)

用法筆記

This sense overlaps with SENSE 3 (EXCELLENT) when applied to people — a 'great scientist' is both highly skilled and historically important. The key difference: SENSE 4 adds the dimension of fame or historical weight, not just quality. When describing a living person, 'great' in this sense is usually reserved for people of established influence.

常見錯誤

He is a great cooker.
He is a great cook.
💡The noun 'cook' (not 'cooker', which is a kitchen appliance) is correct after 'great' for a person who prepares food well.

5. used informally before another adjective of size to make the description stronge

5.形容詞B1
釋義

used informally before another adjective of size to make the description stronger and more vivid, without adding precise meaning.

例句

The family lived in a great big house at the top of the hill with a red front door.

pattern: great + big + noun

A great long line of cars was waiting at the entrance to the theme park before opening time.

同義詞
  • really

    adverb, not adjective; 'a really big house' is the standard non-emphatic version

  • so

    adverb; 'so big' is more common in American English

文法句型

great + (big/long/huge/thick/tall) + noun

用法筆記

In this construction, 'great' does not add factual information — its role is emotional and rhetorical, making the description more colourful. It almost always pairs with an existing size adjective (big, long, huge, thick, tall, wide). It cannot be used with non-size adjectives (*a great beautiful house is unnatural).

常見錯誤

A great small house.
A great big house.
💡'Great' in this sense only combines with adjectives that already express large size, not with 'small'.
We had a great wonderful time.
We had a great time.
💡'Great' as an intensifier pairs with size adjectives, not with quality adjectives like 'wonderful'.

6. having a very strong interest in something or doing something with noticeable en

6.形容詞B2
釋義

having a very strong interest in something or doing something with noticeable energy and enjoyment.

例句

Rania is a great fan of jazz music and goes to live concerts at least twice a month.

pattern: great + fan/lover/believer + of

Vivek was a great reader as a child and finished two library books every single week.

同義詞
  • keen

    more common in British English; 'a keen football fan'

  • avid

    slightly more formal; suggests deep commitment ('an avid reader')

  • passionate

    stronger emotional tone than 'great'; 'a passionate believer in'

反義詞

文法句型

great + noun + of (fan of, lover of, believer in)

用法筆記

This sense appears in the fixed pattern 'great + role noun + of/at (+ activity)'. The role nouns are limited to about a dozen common ones: fan, lover, believer, supporter, reader, walker, talker, thinker, believer, admirer. It always carries a tone of enthusiasm, not just skill.

常見錯誤

She is a great cooker of Italian food.
She is a great cook of Italian food.
💡Use 'cook', not 'cooker'.
He is a great football.
He is a great football fan.
💡The person described needs a role noun, not just the object of interest.

7. showing a generous, kind, or morally admirable quality of character, especially

7.形容詞C1
釋義

showing a generous, kind, or morally admirable quality of character, especially in a difficult situation that calls for courage or self-sacrifice.

例句

Anna was a woman of great heart who always helped neighbours in trouble.

formal/literary register; noun of character: heart, soul, spirit, kindness

The old king was remembered for his great soul and generous, forgiving nature.

同義詞
  • noble

    direct synonym; emphasises moral superiority and honour

  • admirable

    focuses on the quality being worthy of respect

  • magnanimous

    very formal; specifically means generous in forgiving

反義詞
  • petty

    opposite in suggesting small-mindedness or meanness

  • base

    formal; suggests morally low or dishonourable character

文法句型

great + noun of character (heart, soul, spirit, kindness, mercy, courage)

用法筆記

This sense is formal and appears mostly in literary or ceremonial contexts. The nouns it modifies are restricted to abstract character qualities (heart, soul, spirit, courage, mercy, kindness, generosity). In modern everyday speech, this sense of 'great' sounds old-fashioned or poetic. Contrast with SENSE 2 (EXTREME DEGREE), which combines with a wider range of abstract nouns in ordinary contexts.

常見錯誤

❌ 'He showed great heart by eating all his dinner.' — Using 'great heart' for a trivial action sounds unnatural and comical. Reserve 'great + character noun' for genuinely serious or admirable actions.

8. added after the name of a ruler or historical leader to indicate that they are c

8.形容詞B1
釋義

added after the name of a ruler or historical leader to indicate that they are considered the most significant or powerful person of that name in history.

例句

Alexander the Great built one of the largest empires in the ancient world.

title 'the Great' after a ruler's name

Catherine the Great's reign is often called the golden age of Russia.

文法句型

[Name] the Great

用法筆記

This is not a productive adjective pattern — you cannot invent new uses (e.g., *Einstein the Great would sound odd). 'The Great' is a fixed historical epithet attached to certain rulers by tradition. The article 'the' is always required, and the phrase follows the name as a title.

常見錯誤

Great Alexander
Alexander the Great
💡The title always follows the name, with 'the' before 'Great'.
Peter the great
Peter the Great
💡The title is capitalised as part of the name.

great — adverb

great — noun

great — prefix