little vs massive

little

adj
  • Small in size. 

  • Operating on a small scale. 

  • Very young. 

  • Short in duration; brief. 

  • To imply that the inhabitants of the place have an insular attitude and are hostile to those they perceive as foreign. 

  • Small in extent of views or sympathies; narrow; shallow; contracted; mean; illiberal; ungenerous. 

  • Younger. 

  • Used with the name of a place, especially of a country or its capital, to denote a neighborhood whose residents or storekeepers are from that place. 

  • Having few members. 

  • Insignificant, trivial. 

  • Used to belittle a person. 

adv
  • Not at all. 

  • Not much. 

det
  • Not much, only a little: only a small amount (of). 

pron
  • Not much; not a large amount. 

noun
  • One who has mentally age regressed to a childlike state. 

  • A small amount. 

  • A child; particularly an infant. 

  • A newly initiated member of a sorority, who is mentored by a big. 

  • The participant in ageplay who acts out the younger role. 

massive

adj
  • Very large in size or extent. 

  • Very large or bulky and heavy and solid. 

  • Outstanding, beautiful. 

  • Not having an obvious crystalline structure. 

  • Having any mass. 

  • Having a large mass. 

  • To a very great extent; total, utter. 

  • Of particularly exceptional quality or value; awesome. 

  • Affecting a large portion of the body, or severe. 

  • Homogenous, unstructured. 

noun
  • A group of people from a locality, or sharing a collective aim, interest, etc. 

  • A homogeneous mass of rock, not layered and without an obvious crystal structure. 

How often have the words little and massive occurred in a corpus of books? (source: Google Ngram Viewer )