Mickle in a sentence as a noun

As a Southern Scot I'm familiar with muckle, many a mickle makes a muckle. I believe the CSS equivalent of a pixel in browser rendering here is a "baw hair".

Many a mickle, makes a muckle. So while it might look like "little" on its own, I'm pretty sure this can easily add up over time, particularly if an author keeps releasing books that keep on selling.

Many mickles make a muckle, as George Washington was fond of saying. It's also good because a wide variety of experts from different fields can attack the problem from different angles.

I have found from experience that if I give a binary, they will, ever treat it as a mere sample, no matter what mickle warnings I send with it. They will treat it as the "official" version and ask questions about why various things work as they do, or why certain things are missing.

Many a mickle makes a muckle, this applies to pretty much everything. If everybody keeps acting like their individual contributions are completely meaningless, then nobody will change anything about their own ways and thus large scale change will remain a pipe-dream.

Many a little makes a mickle, as such those "some local contaminations" can add up very quickly to a very large scale, especially considering how long these contaminations last. > This is not in any way a desired event, and if nuclear technology would be developed, and not demonized, its probability could be far smaller, as many technologies are already available to avoid such accidents, which have all happened on old power plants.

Mickle definitions

noun

(often followed by `of') a large number or amount or extent; "a batch of letters"; "a deal of trouble"; "a lot of money"; "he made a mint on the stock market"; "see the rest of the winners in our huge passel of photos"; "it must have cost plenty"; "a slew of journalists"; "a wad of money"

See also: batch