. . . . "Least (comparative less) 1. \n* ;The smallest amount of [something uncountable]. He earns the least money in his family. Of all the sisters, she has the least patience. I can only afford to pay the least of the bills. 2. \n* 1857, Edmund March Blunt, The American Coast Pilot: Containing Directions for the Principal Harbors, E. & G.W. Blunt, page 135: The least water we could find there was 4 fathoms, which bears from the point S.E., and is distant 1\u00BD mile. 3. \n* 2004, Jim Baggott, Beyond Measure: Modern Physics, Philosophy, and the Meaning of Quantum Theory, Oxford University Press, page 48: Light does not need to know in advance which is the path of least time because it takes all paths from its source to its destination."@ia . . . . "Least"@ia . . . . . . . . . . . . "Least (comparative less) 1. \n* ;The smallest amount of [something uncountable]. He earns the least money in his family. Of all the sisters, she has the least patience. I can only afford to pay the least of the bills. 2. \n* 1857, Edmund March Blunt, The American Coast Pilot: Containing Directions for the Principal Harbors, E. & G.W. Blunt, page 135: The least water we could find there was 4 fathoms, which bears from the point S.E., and is distant 1\u00BD mile. 3. \n* 2004, Jim Baggott, Beyond Measure: Modern Physics, Philosophy, and the Meaning of Quantum Theory, Oxford University Press, page 48: Light does not need to know in advance which is the path of least time because it takes all paths from its source to its destination."@ia . . . . .