negligible
negligible — adjective
1. so small or slight that it does not make a real difference or need to be thought
so small or slight that it does not make a real difference or need to be thought about
The cost of fixing the old lamp was negligible, so Chiara decided to repair it.
collocation: negligible cost
Hugo checked the figures twice and found the error was negligible — less than one percent.
collocation: negligible error
Despite the storm, damage to the sea wall proved negligible thanks to its new design.
Doctors say the risk of side effects from this vaccine is negligible for healthy adults.
Liang's changes to the draft were negligible, so the editor approved it without re-reading.
- insignificant
More general — can refer to unimportance in size, value, or meaning; 'insignificant' is broader than 'negligible'
- trivial
Carries a dismissive tone; suggests something is not worth serious attention, whereas 'negligible' is more neutral and objective
- minor
Less strong — a minor problem still has some importance; 'negligible' problems have virtually none
- minute
Focuses on extreme smallness in size or degree, especially in technical contexts; 'negligible' also suggests the smallness makes it irrelevant
- significant
Large enough to matter or be noticed — the direct opposite
- considerable
Fairly large in amount or degree
- substantial
Large enough to have a real effect or value
文法句型
negligible + noun
be + negligible
用法筆記
Used both before a noun (attributive: 'a negligible amount') and after a linking verb (predicative: 'the effect was negligible'). Most common in academic writing, technical reports, and formal discussions of risk, cost, or impact. In everyday conversation, speakers more often use 'tiny' or 'very small' instead.