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I can’t understand these words. “ he has got little money” and “ he has got VERY LITTLE money”; “ I have got few friends” and “I have got VERY FEW friends”.

Andrew Clarke
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Very X is an intensifier; X is usually an adjective or adverb. It means the meaning of X is stronger than normal, expected, or compared to others. There is no exact or fixed level of intensity; it's relative to common, assumed, or previously communicated information or experiences between speaker/writer and reader/listener.

Very can modify itself, so you can say very very little, or very very very little, for example.

Very is also a word that's frequently thrown into conversation for exaggeration purposes in order to make it more interesting or attention-grabbing, and can be overused, particularly by excitable or nervous people.

LawrenceC
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  • Why are you not saying that this is not BrE? This posters keeps posting under the BrE title, and he has not been right,once. Lemme tell'ya, he prolly ain't got no friends. [smile] – Lambie Jul 16 '20 at 23:04
  • Is this not true for BrE as well? If not let me know and I'll delete if totally inapplicable. – LawrenceC Jul 16 '20 at 23:19