Objects being described by their relative size are often described as being comparatively big and little, or large and small, although "big and little tend to carry affective and evaluative connotations, whereas large and small tend to refer only to the size of a thing". A wide range of other terms exist to describe things by their relative size, with small things being described for example as tiny, miniature, or minuscule, and large things being described as, for example, huge, gigantic, or enormous. Objects are also typically described as tall or short specifically relative to their vertical height, and as long or short specifically relative to their length along other directions. People who have experienced excessive growth and height significantly above average are described as having
gigantism. Outside of humans,
deep-sea gigantism (or abyssal gigantism) is the tendency for species of deep-sea dwelling animals to be larger than their shallower-water relatives across a large taxonomic range, and
island gigantism (or insular gigantism) is a biological phenomenon in which the size of an animal species isolated on an island increases dramatically in comparison to its mainland relatives. Although the size of an object may be reflected in its
mass or its
weight, each of these is a different concept. In scientific contexts, mass refers loosely to the amount of "
matter" in an object (though "matter" may be difficult to define), whereas weight refers to the
force experienced by an object due to
gravity. An object with a mass of 1.0 kilogram will weigh approximately 9.81 newtons (
newton is the unit of force, while
kilogram is the unit of mass) on the surface of the
Earth (its mass multiplied by the
gravitational field strength). Its weight will be less on
Mars (where gravity is weaker), more on
Saturn, and negligible in space when far from any significant source of gravity, but it will always have the same mass. Two objects of equal size, however, may have very different mass and weight, depending on the
composition and
density of the objects. By contrast, if two objects are known to have roughly the same composition, then some information about the size of one can be determined by measuring the size of the other, and determining the difference in weight between the two. For example, if two blocks of wood are equally dense, and it is known that one weighs ten kilograms and the other weighs twenty kilograms, and that the ten kilogram block has a volume of one cubic foot, then it can be deduced that the twenty kilogram block has a volume of two cubic feet. ==Conceptualization and generalization==