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I want to ask about a particular usage of the "most" word.

When I say (talking about YouTube videos for e.g.):

Videos with most views

does it convey the meaning that those videos have views more than others? More specifically, does it mean the same as:

Videos with largest numbers of views. If we create a list of all videos, these videos will come at the top of the list.

?

If not, how to use most to convey that meaning? or what are "most" alternatives?

How would a native express the meaning of the second quote above?

ammar
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  • I checked these questions but they don't answer my question – ammar Feb 19 '20 at 15:53
  • Oh, well in that case I simply don't understand your question. Note that idiomatically (maybe grammatically, I dunno), *These are the videos with [the] most views* is valid with or without the article. But These are the videos with the largest number[s]* of views* is NOT valid without that highlighted article (opinions may differ as regards whether *numbers* should be pluralised, and/or whether this choice could affect the meaning or syntactic structure). – FumbleFingers Feb 19 '20 at 16:09
  • The potentially duplicate question has a determiner before "most" in its examples. I also believe "most" has a slightly different meaning there. – CJ Dennis Feb 19 '20 at 21:41

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