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particle

tiny piece / subatomic unit / grammatical word
[C] Countable
pl: particles

The word evokes an image of the smallest possible unit of something, emphasizing insignificance in size but significance in composition. In general use, it suggests a tiny, often floating or drifting speck that is barely visible to the naked eye. In scientific contexts, the feeling shifts from 'small piece' to 'fundamental building block.' Here, it describes an entity that defines the nature of matter itself, moving away from the idea of a fragment and toward the idea of a primary unit. In linguistics, it refers to a functional element that lacks independent meaning but alters the meaning of other words. This usage is technical and clinical, devoid of the physical imagery associated with dust or atoms.

💬Casual Conversation

🎬Tuesday afternoon, Maya is cleaning her apartment while Jackson is trying to pitch a new project.
Jackson

Imagine a coin backed by every single subatomic particle in the universe.

Jackson
Maya
Maya

Give it a rest, Jackson. You're totally delusional.

💡
Jackson attempts to sound intellectual by using physics terminology ('subatomic particle') to pitch another absurd cryptocurrency idea. Maya uses the phrasal verb 'give it a rest' to tell him to stop talking, reflecting her lack of patience for his behavior.

Meanings

Nountiny piece

A minute portion of a substance; a tiny piece of matter.

"A single particle of dust floated in the sunlight."

Nounsubatomic unit

A minute unit of matter that is the smallest possible piece of a chemical element or a subatomic entity.

"The proton is a positively charged subatomic particle."

Noungrammatical word

A word that does not change its form and does not fit into the main categories of speech, such as a preposition or an article.

"The word the is a definite article and a grammatical particle."

Related Words

Last Updated: June 8, 2026Report an Error