Cloth vs Material vs Tissue
When to use each in English, with meaning, register, and examples.
Cloth
Top 2,000 (common)B1noun
Material
Top 1,000 (very common)A2noun
Tissue
Top 2,000 (common)B2noun
Most common: Material
| Cloth | Material | Tissue | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pronunciation | 🇬🇧 /["/klɒθ/","/klɒθs/"]/🇺🇸 /["/klɔːθ/","/klɔːðz/"]/ | 🇬🇧 /["/məˈtɪəriəl/"]/🇺🇸 /["/məˈtɪriəl/"]/ | 🇬🇧 /["/ˈtɪʃuː/"]/🇺🇸 /["/ˈtɪʃuː/"]/ |
| Meaning | A piece of fabric used for making clothes, or for cleaning. | The substance or matter that things are made of. | A thin piece of paper used for cleaning, like blowing your nose. |
| Example | She bought some cloth to make a dress. | The dress is made from a beautiful fabric that is a soft material. | a box of tissues |
| Register | Neutral | Neutral | Neutral |
| How common | Top 2,000 (common) | Top 1,000 (very common) | Top 2,000 (common) |
| CEFR level | B1 | A2 | B2 |
| Part of speech | noun | noun | noun |
| Collocations | coarse, fine, woven, bale, bolt, length, make, produce, weave, industry, manufacture, merchant, soft, damp, wet, dampen, dip in something, moisten | combustible, flammable, hazardous, contain, incorporate, use, fascinating, good, relevant, collect, find, gather, material for, material on, coarse, rough, thick, piece, scrap, strip | paper, toilet, box, pack, package, use, take, on a/the tissue, with a/the tissue, living, healthy, normal, damage, remove |
| Antonyms | bare, naked | immaterial, insubstantial, nonphysical | solid, rock, metal |
| Common mistakes | Confused with 'clothe' which is a verb., Using 'cloth' to refer to clothing instead of the material., Mispronouncing as 'cloath' instead of 'cloth'. | Confused with 'materiel', which refers to military supplies., Used inappropriately as an adjective when referring to characteristic qualities (e.g., 'material nature' should just be 'nature'). | Confused with 'tissues' when talking about multiple sheets., Used 'tissue' to mean body tissue, which is less common in everyday conversation., Spelled incorrectly as 'tisssue'. |
| Usage notes | Commonly used in everyday conversation; appropriate in both formal and informal contexts. Avoid using it when referring to specific types of fabric (e.g., silk, wool). | Used in both everyday and academic contexts. In casual speech, it can refer to anything from fabric to resources for projects. Avoid using in very technical or specific scientific contexts unless the material is defined. | Use 'tissue' when referring to the paper product. It’s more appropriate in conversations about health or hygiene rather than in formal writing or discussions. |
Frequently asked questions: Cloth vs Material vs Tissue
What's the difference between Cloth, Material, and Tissue?
Cloth: A piece of fabric used for making clothes, or for cleaning. Material: The substance or matter that things are made of. Tissue: A thin piece of paper used for cleaning, like blowing your nose.
Which is more common: Cloth, Material, and Tissue?
Material is the most common in everyday English.
Are Cloth, Material, and Tissue the same CEFR level?
Cloth: B1, Material: A2, Tissue: B2 on the CEFR scale.
Can I use Cloth, Material, and Tissue interchangeably?
Not always. Cloth, Material, and Tissue are related and overlap in some contexts, but they differ in register, how common they are, and usage, so swapping one for another can change the meaning or tone. Check the differences above before substituting.