English edit

Adjective edit

little-known (comparative lesser-known, superlative least-known)

  1. Not known about by many people.
    • 1951 Februry, K. Westcott Jones, “Some Australian Railway Byways”, in Railway Magazine, page 117:
      Some little-known lines belonging to the State exist in the extreme south-west corner of Western Australia, to serve the timber country.
    • 2002, James Hawkins, No Cherubs for Melanie (An Inspector Bliss Mystery), Toronto, Ont.: Dundurn Press, page 43:
      Someone will come out in a moment, he guessed, acclimatizing himself to the atmosphere, and reminiscing nostalgically about the time he and his young wife-to-be were early arrivals for a first night performance of a little-known play by an even lesser-known amateur theatrical group.
    • 2009 September, Pat Choate, “Innovation”, in Saving Capitalism: Keeping America Strong, New York, N.Y.: Vintage Books, →ISBN, page 116:
      In the thirty years between the end of World War II and 1975, the FTC, a somewhat little-known independent federal agency headed by even lesser-known political appointees, forced almost one hundred similar compulsory licensing decrees upon other American companies, []
    • 2011, Ruth Hemus, “The Manifesto of Céline Arnauld”, in Elza Adamowicz, Eric Robertson, editors, Dada and Beyond, Volume 1: Dada Discourses, Amsterdam, New York, N.Y.: Rodopi, →ISBN, section “Dada Tactics”, page 122:
      She is marginal even in relation to the marginal: the little-known avant-garde writer’s even lesser-known wife.
    • 2013 October 9, “Battersea Power Station ‘at risk’”, in The Times[1], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 11 April 2021[2]:
      Battersea Power Station is among a host of world monuments that have been placed on a list of threatened heritage. It is one of 67 cultural sites in 41 countries deemed to be at risk from the forces of nature and social, political and economic change.
      They range from Venice to the little-known village of Pok Fu Lam in Hong Kong, and include sites dating from prehistory to the twentieth century.
    • 2020, Gordon H. Rodda, Lizards of the World: Natural History and Taxon Accounts, Baltimore, Md.: Johns Hopkins University Press, →ISBN, page 232, column 1:
      Caparaonia itaiquara is the sole member of this genus of Brazilian gymnophthalmids. It is among the least-known of the little-known gymnophthalmids (cells filled: 12% v. 19%).
    • 2022 January 12, “Network News: More Secrets of the Underground”, in RAIL, number 948, page 19:
      London Transport Museum's Siddy Holloway and rail historian and RAIL contributor Tim Dunn will reunite to discover more hidden sites and little-known stories from the Tube.

Usage notes edit

Also separable - "he is little known in this country"

Antonyms edit