See also: a lot and allot

English

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Adverb

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alot (not comparable)

  1. (nonstandard, proscribed) Alternative form of a lot (compare to awhile).

Noun

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alot (uncountable)

  1. (nonstandard, proscribed) Alternative form of a lot
    • 2000, Teaching Secondary English, ed. Daniel Sheridan. [in a tenth-grade student's paper]
      There was alot of sex discrimination in the 60’s. For one thing there was no sports for girls and in alot of schools the female teachers were not allowed to get married or they could be fired. [1]
    • 2003, Matt Janacone, Three by the Sea[2]:
      It was alot of lumber, alot of condos, and Joe did not know alot about either of them, only that it was alot of money; he hated to throw his money into something he did not know alot about.
    • 2005, Aphrodite Jones, Cruel Sacrifice [From the suicidal patient's own writing.] [3]
      She talked about death: “My philosophy on life is it could be alot better. Like I would’ve never gotten into this mess if I wouldn’t have tried to commit suicide. Actually I was just trying to make myself sick. But then again it could be alot worse! [...]”

Usage notes

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This spelling of "a lot" is frequent in informal writing but not generally accepted by arbiters of English usage. Others view it as a legitimate contraction. Some occurrences of alot in print may be typographical errors.

  • 1993, The Columbia Guide to Standard American English calls alot “substandard” and notes that it is “increasingly found in informal correspondence and student writing” and “has as yet received no sanction in print except on the op-ed and sports pages.” [4] [5]
  • 1996, The American Heritage Book of English Usage states that “alot is still considered an error in print” but notes that standard words have formed by fusion of the article with a noun, such as another and awhile, and suggests the possibility that alot may, like them, eventually enter standard usage. [6]
  • 2004, Jack Lynch Guide to Grammar and Style (entry dated 2004) flatly states this to be a two-word expression. [7]
  • 2004, The Cambridge Guide to English Usage also compares alot to awhile. It states alot to be “still regarded as nonstandard” and notes 50 appearances in the British National Corpus, “almost entirely from three sources: e-mail, TV autocue data, and TV newscripts.” It suggests that some usages of alot in typewritten use are to be considered merely typos of the standard a lot though its appearance in handwriting and typescript is “more significant, as the shadow of things to come.” [8]

See also

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Anagrams

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Balinese

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Romanization

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alot

  1. Romanization of ᬳᬮᭀᬢ᭄

Indonesian

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Etymology

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Borrowed from Javanese ꦲꦭꦺꦴꦠ꧀ (alot), from Old Javanese alot, alwat.

Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): /ˈalɔt̚/
  • Hyphenation: alot

Noun

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alot (first-person possessive alotku, second-person possessive alotmu, third-person possessive alotnya)

  1. (dialect, Java) tough, hard.
    Synonym: liat
    Antonym: lancar

Further reading

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Javanese

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Romanization

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alot

  1. Romanization of ꦲꦭꦺꦴꦠ꧀

Kiput

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Etymology

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From Proto-North Sarawak *alud.

Noun

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alot

  1. boat

Old Javanese

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Etymology

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Affixed lot (persistent(ly), untiring(ly), tenacious(ly), steadfast(ly); continuously) +‎ a- (adjective form prefix). Doublet of alwat.

Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): /alot/
  • Rhymes: -lot
  • Hyphenation: a‧lot

Adjective

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alot

  1. continuous
  2. permanent
  3. lasting, persisting

Descendants

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  • Javanese: ꦲꦭꦺꦴꦠ꧀ (alot)
  • Balinese: ᬳᬮᭀᬢ᭄ (alot)

Further reading

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  • "alot" in P.J. Zoetmulder with the collaboration of S.O. Robson, Old Javanese-English Dictionary. 's-Gravenhage: M. Nijhoff, 1982.