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amount

/ษ™หˆmaสŠnt/

Intransitive Verb[C/U] Both

Refers to a bulk quantity that is perceived as a mass rather than individual units. It carries a neutral, objective tone often associated with measurement or accounting. While 'number' refers to countable items, 'amount' describes things that are measured by volume, weight, or value (like water, time, or money). Using it for countable items is common in casual speech but is often avoided in formal writing. In financial contexts, it specifically denotes the final sum or a particular balance. It suggests a totalityโ€”the end result of adding everything together.

Uncountable when referring to a bulk mass or an imprecise quantity ('a huge amount of stress'). Countable when referring to specific, distinct sums of money or measured totals ('The amounts owed by each client vary').

๐Ÿ’ฌCasual Conversation

๐ŸŽฌLate night on the Mars outpost, Kip is under a leaking coolant pipe.
Kip

The sealant's shot. I can't even tell what amount of fluid we've lost.

Kip
Commander Tom
Commander Tom

Typical. My heart aches for a rainy Tuesday in Seattle right now.

๐Ÿ’ก
Kip uses 'amount' to express the critical uncertainty of their resource loss, while Tom ignores the technical crisis to indulge in his characteristic melodrama and homesickness.

Meanings

Nounamount

A quantity of something, typically an unspecified mass or a total sum of money.

"The total amount of rain fell in two days was ten inches."

Intransitive VerbTo add up to a specific total or sum.
[~ to something]

The bill amounts to fifty dollars.

Intransitive VerbTo be equivalent to or have the same effect as something else.
[~ to something]

His silence amounts to a confession of guilt.

Examples

The project required a significant amount of research and planning.

The total amount of the bill was higher than expected.

The new policy had a measurable amount of impact on productivity.

Collocations & Compounds

a large amount

A significant quantity of something.

We have a large amount of work to do.

a small amount

A tiny quantity of something.

Just add a small amount of salt.

the total amount

The complete sum or quantity.

What is the total amount due?

a certain amount

An unspecified but definite quantity.

It requires a certain amount of planning.

a fixed amount

A predetermined or set quantity.

You pay a fixed amount each month.

Phrasal Verbs

amount to

To add up to; to be equivalent to.

His vague promises didn't amount to much.

Idioms & Sayings

the lion's share of the amount

The largest portion or quantity of something.

He took the lion's share of the amount awarded.

Cultural Context

The Psychology of the Amount: Why Our Brains Struggle with Large Numbers

Human cognition is remarkably poorly equipped to handle a truly massive amount of data or numerical value. This phenomenon, often discussed in behavioral economics and psychology, reveals a fundamental glitch in how we perceive scale. When we deal with small numbers, our brains can visualize them concretely; three apples are easily imagined. However, once the amount reaches a certain threshold, we enter the realm of numerical abstraction, where the difference between a million and a billion becomes psychologically blurred.<br><br>This cognitive limitation is known as scope neglect. When people are asked to consider a large amount of a resource or a population, they often fail to scale their emotional response or their decision-making process accordingly. For instance, the psychological impact of losing ten people is devastating, but the impact of losing ten thousand is often processed with a similar level of intensity because the human mind cannot intuitively grasp the sheer amount of loss involved. This is why statistics in news reports often feel hollow; the amount is too vast for our evolutionary hardware to process.<br><br>Furthermore, this struggle extends to how we perceive time and money. The amount of time in a century is an abstract concept, whereas an hour is a tangible experience. By understanding these limitations, we can see why humans are so prone to underestimating systemic risks or overestimating their own capacity to manage large quantities of information. We are biologically wired for the immediate and the small-scale, leaving us perpetually bewildered by the staggering amounts that define the modern global economy and the cosmos.

Etymology

The word 'amount' entered Middle English in the late 14th century. It derives from the Old French 'amont,' meaning 'up, upward, towards the mountain.' This, in turn, comes from the Latin 'ad montem,' literally 'to the mountain.' Initially, 'amount' was used as an adverb or preposition to describe movement upwards or a quantity that rises or accumulates. The sense of 'total quantity' or 'sum' emerged in the 15th century, likely as a metaphorical extension of something 'mounting up' or increasing to a total. The verb form, meaning 'to amount to,' meaning 'to add up to' or 'to be equivalent to,' appeared in the 16th century. The transition from a physical sense of upward movement to an abstract sense of quantity reflects a common linguistic pattern where spatial concepts are used to describe non-spatial ones.

Related Words

Last Updated: June 18, 2026Report an Error