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Sir_Knight
Guest
So you are more knowledgeable than professional dictionary writers. That is pretty impressive but I’ll need more than just your word to convince me that they are wrong. Kindly show me an authoritative source that does NOT use “many” to define “most” and “most” to define “many” in their complete definition. Otherwise, I’ll have to doubt what you say.Wrong.
And sorry, the American Heritage Dictionary isn’t a definitive source of information on English lexicography.
If you have 20 people, and 19 are uneducated, then most are uneducated. So are many.
But if 10 are uneducated, you could say many are uneducated, but you can’t say most are. Because most aren’t. Just half. Or, in this case, “many”.
Words have subtle distinctions in meaning. MANY is a positive degree adjective. MOST is superlative.
They’re not the same; one means a majority, the other just a large number. Of course a majority is also a large number - but a large number isn’t always a majority.
An important semantic distinction.