Tiny in spanish
pronunciation: minuskuloʊ part of speech: adjective
tiny [tinier -comp., tiniest -sup.] = diminuto, minúsculo, chiquitito, chiquitín, pequeñito. [Pincha en o en para ver otros adjetivos cuyo grados comparativos y superlativos se formas añadiendo "-er" o "-est" (o sus variantes "-r" o "-st") al final]
Example: With an estimated 300,000 'titles' in print it is clear that no bookshop can hope to stock more than a tiny fraction of those titles.more:
» a tiny bit of = un poquito de.
Example: Now its a frigging oil drum and the reason nobody would take it was because there was a tiny bit of oil in the bottom.» be bored out of + Posesivo + (tiny) mind = aburrirse como una ostra, estar aburrido como una ostra, estar aburridísimo, estar muerto de asco.
Example: Bored out of her mind with the long hours and mundane tasks, she decided to give radio a try.» little tiny = diminuto, minúsculo, chiquitito, chiquitín, pequeñito.
Example: One such change was when I began to see little tiny hairs growing out of my face.» out of + Posesivo + (tiny) mind = loco, enajenado, enajenado mental, trastornado, trastornado mental, desquiciado, desquiciado mental, fuera de quicio.
Example: The article 'Out of their minds: legal theory in neural networks' criticises the use of neural networks in law.» teeny-tiny = pequeñito, chiquitito, chiquitín, diminuto, minúsculo, poquito, chispita.
Example: Once upon a time there was a teeny-tiny woman who lived in a teeny-tiny house in a teeny-tiny village.» tiny little = diminuto, minúsculo, chiquitito, chiquitín, pequeñito.
Example: You could break my heart into tiny little pieces, and I'd still pick them up and put them back in your hands.