Significant vs Important
Definitions
- ‘Significant’ (adj) means ‘sufficiently great or important to be worthy of attention; noteworthy’.
- ‘Important’ (adj) means ‘of great significance or value; having great effect or influence’.
What’s the difference between ‘significant’ and ‘important’?
These two words have very similar meanings, but should be used carefully in academic writing.
- While ‘important’ can be used in a variety of contexts to stress the great effect or influence of something, ‘significant’ is very often used in a statistical context.
- The connotation of ‘significant’ is that something is sufficiently noteworthy to have crossed a threshold (e.g. in the statistical sense, that threshold is a probability value).
- Not all academic uses of ‘significant’ relate to statistics. In some cases, the use of the word can be ambiguous, so is best avoided when not reporting statistics. ‘Important’ is a more versatile adjective (think also ‘major’, ‘crucial’, ‘determining’, etc), but it does not denote statistical significance.
Writing tip: Want to make sure your writing is accurate and academic-like? Writefull gives you the best language feedback on your texts, plus clever AI widgets to help you write. Install now.
How they’re used
Example sentences with ‘significant’
- This could have a significant effect on the outcome of the election.
- Post-test results were not statistically significant.
Example sentences with ‘important’
- The study reveals important differences in costs and outcomes.
- The difference in quality of care was important.