It means that one problem or unanswered question has been resolved. This expression is often used when a person has many things to think about or do and one has been taken care of.
Both "one more thing to worry about" and "one thing more to worry about" are grammatically correct, but "one more thing to worry about" is more commonly used in English.
Both are ok, but the first phrase is colloquial (not to say incorrect) because "less" is properly used only of quantities that cannot be counted. The technically correct word, in the first phrase, is 'fewer.' There is also a difference of meaning in the two phrases. In the first case, less is an adjective modifying thing; in the second, it is a noun. The second phrase could be restructured thus: Less to worry about, by one thing. In English the adjective precedes the noun as in 'The green house' whereas in French the adjective follows the noun as in 'La maison verte'. In bilingual countries such as Canada (French/English) you will occasionally find phrases that jump the language barrier and have a French grammar to them, such as 'One thing less to worry about.'
You can't. If a specialist is someone who knows more and more about less and less until finally they know everything about nothing, then a generalist would be someone who knows less and less about more and more until finally he knows nothing about everything. Find one thing you are good at, and be that one thing. If you should come to master it and be bored, then worry about branching out. (But who has mastered even one thing?)
You can't. If a specialist is someone who knows more and more about less and less until finally they know everything about nothing, then a generalist would be someone who knows less and less about more and more until finally he knows nothing about everything. Find one thing you are good at, and be that one thing. If you should come to master it and be bored, then worry about branching out. (But who has mastered even one thing?)
Either
They will last the life of the car. They are one thing on your car you do not have to worry about.
To say one thing and mean another is sarcasm.
It means one thing is of smallet quantity than another. As in less than perfect or in mathematics 1 is less than 2. In logic or maths this would be written 1<2
That is superstitious.If you dream of one,do not worry about it.
No..less then means that you have less then one thing..equal means you have the same and no more thenEASY ANSWER:Yes
Don't worry, they are probably fine. You might notice it, but no-one else will
It doesn't mean one thing in particular. I wouldn't read too much into the situation. Just because he didn't look back doesn't mean he isn't thinking about you. He may like you, he may not. But don't worry about it. He's a guy.