A defect implies a deficiency, a lack, a falling short, while a
fault signifies that there is something wrong.
"Men still had faults, and men will have them still,
He that hath none, and lives as angels do
Must be an angel."
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"It is in general more profitable to reckon up our defects than to
boast of our attainments."
Few, Little
These words and their comparatives, fewer, less, are often confounded.
Few relates to number, or to what may be counted; little refers to
quantity, or to what may be measured. A man may have few books and
little money; he may have fewer friends and less influence than his
neighbor. But do not say "The man has less friends than his neighbor."
Each other, One another
While some excellent authorities use these expressions
interchangeably, most grammarians and authors employ each other in
referring to two persons or things, and one another when more than two
are considered; as, "Both contestants speak kindly of each other."
"Gentlemen are always polite to one another."
Those who prefer to have wide latitude in speech will be glad to know
that Murray, in one of the rules in his grammar, says, "Two negatives
in English destroy one another.
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