left vs leftover: what is the difference?

This pair of words can be a pain because it’s hard to find good explanations online with the differences. Some people claim the difference is about formality or politeness. However, there is a deeper difference because “left” cannot be used everywhere that “leftover” can be used. How can we know whether we should use left or leftover?

“left” is about a part of a process that still has not been removed or completed

Originally, this word comes from “leave.” Now, it has lost this connection because it has been used only with “have” or “there is” to talk about something that remains.

I still have 10 math problems left to finish.
= 10 math problems remain.

After I bought my phone, there was only $200 left in my bank account.
= $200 remained in my bank.

Notice that this use of “left” is in a very specific position: always after a noun. This is the only place you can put it with these meaning. This is not a regular adjective that can go before a noun. Because of this, “the 10 left math problems” or “the left $200” is completely wrong. You will need another word like “the 10 remaining math problems” or “the remaining $200.”

“left over” is about something remaining, especially a byproduct, that we wanted to use but never did

In other words, if something “is left over,” it means that we wanted to use it, or the remaining part was unnecessary. This is most common about food or crafts.

Maybe you didn’t like my cooking, seeing as there was a lot left over.
= I expected the food to be gone, but it stayed in the pot.

I made a paper dog, but I have too much brown paper left over that I don’t know what to do with.
= My process finished, but a lot of unnecessary paper remained.

an example of something that was left over, not left
We had a few slices of pizzas left over after dinner.
“left over” versus “leftover”

“Left over” is used in the very specific situation like “left.” It is only used with “have” or “there is.”

We have a lot of pasta left over from last night.
= Pasta remains after our dinner last night.

“Leftover” is an adjective, which “left” cannot be.

I hate eating leftover pizza.
= I hate eating pizza that someone didn’t eat yesterday.

“Leftovers,” which is always plural, is a noun form. It is something that we wanted to use, or it was unnecessary. I think that I use this word to mean “food that we didn’t eat” 99% of the time.

I didn’t cook anything today because we have plenty of leftovers in the freezer.
= There is more uneaten frozen food than necessary, so I didn’t cook.

Summary

  • left: “this is next on our to-do list” / cannot be an adjective
  • left over: “we never needed this” / can be an adjective “leftover”

To really see the difference, here is an example to help understand when to use left or leftover:

We have a pepperoni pizza left.
= This was said by someone who works at a pizza restaurant, and they still need to make this final pizza. This is the last part in the process of making many pizzas.

We have a pepperoni pizza left over.
= This was said by someone who bought many pizzas. Either they expected to eat all the pizzas, or they want to say that this number of pizzas was too much. “See? We should have ordered less.”

There are 10 hotdogs left.
= You are in a hotdog eating competition, and you will win after 10 hotdogs.

There are 10 hotdogs left over.
= We cooked 10 more hotdogs than we needed
.

I hope these examples and explanations made it clear. Now, you should be able to use left or leftover correctly.

If you want to see more English explanations, you can find them on this website.

If you want to see videos about language learning, I have a whole YouTube channel about that that you can watch here.

There’s not a lot of English words left that you don’t know! 😊 Keep on studying!