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Greater

Greater is the comparative form of the adjective great. It is used to indicate a higher degree of size, extent, importance, or intensity. In English, greater often modifies nouns or adjectives, as in a greater number, a greater extent, or a greater concern. It appears in fixed phrases such as the greater part or the greater good, where it signals a larger or more significant portion or outcome.

In grammar, greater is formed from great by adding the suffix -er and functions as a comparative.

Etymology wise, the word derives from Old English grēat and is cognate with similar Germanic-language terms.

In mathematics and logic, the phrase greater than describes an ordering relation, denoted by the symbol >.

Geographically and culturally, greater is used in compound place names to indicate a larger region relative

Common confusion may occur with the homophone grater, a kitchen tool. Beyond that, greater functions as a

It
is
commonly
used
in
comparisons
between
two
or
more
items,
with
the
base
form
great
remaining
in
related
phrases
such
as
“the
greater
of
two
evils”
or
“the
greater
number
of
people.”
Over
time,
its
comparative
form
standardized
as
greater,
used
across
a
broad
range
of
contexts.
It
is
used
to
compare
numbers,
quantities,
or
values,
as
in
x
>
y,
and
extends
to
inequalities,
functions,
and
data
sets
in
science
and
statistics.
to
a
related
smaller
area.
Examples
include
Greater
London,
the
historic
term
Greater
Antilles,
and
other
uses
where
the
word
signals
relative
size
or
significance.
standard
comparative
form
across
many
domains.