more
EN[mɔː] [mɔɹ] [mo(ː)ɹ] [moə] [-ɔː(ɹ)]US UK
FPlus WMore
- More peut faire référence à :
FR more
- NomPLmoresSUF-more
- VerbeSGmoresPRmoringPT, PPmored
- (transitive) To root up.
- (transitive) To root up.
- Adverbe
- To a greater degree or extent.
- He walks more in the morning these days.
- (now poetic) In negative constructions: any further, any longer; any more.
- Used alone to form the comparative form of adjectives and adverbs.
- You're more beautiful than I ever imagined.
- (now dialectal or humorous) Used in addition to an inflected comparative form. (Standard until the 18thc.).
- I was more better at English than you.
- To a greater degree or extent.
- Déterminant
- Comparative form of many: in greater number. (Used for a discrete quantity.).
- More people are arriving.
- There are more ways to do this than I can count.
- Comparative form of much: in greater quantity, amount, or proportion. (Used for a continuous quantity.).
- I want more soup; I need more time
- There's more caffeine in my coffee than in the coffee you get in most places.
- Comparative form of many: in greater number. (Used for a discrete quantity.).
- Plus d'exemples
- Utilisé au milieu de la phrase
- Gaining the more open water, the bracing breeze waxed fresh; the little Moss tossed the quick foam from her bows, as a young colt his snortings. — Herman Melville, Moby-Dick.
- Recently, more and more attention has been drawn to neurorestorative therapies, which possess far longer time window than acute neuroprotection [4 , 5 ].
- Instead of having a nice modular eggcrate, we now want to build an immodular eggcrate. Deliberately we want to impose upon future teachers, not the nice simple eggcrate, but a more complicated one.
- Utilisé au début de la phrase
- More civilians than soldiers have been blown up by anti-personnel mines.
- More interesting is Nobuhiro Kawanaka's ShiShosetsu, whose slow motion and warm, filmstock colors deny close-ups of a woman's breasts some of their anatomic power.
- More precisely, he is overequipped: among the items he takes from London are a collapsible canoe, a Union Jack, six linen suits, an astrolabe and a portable humidor.
- Utilisé dans la fin de la phrase
- I plowed through two helpings, but then I didn't have room for any more.
- Lou snapped off a bin-bag from the roll. In her present mood, there were some things she wasn't going to shy away from any more.
- With tact and management it would be possible to partially satisfy creditors, and keep up appearances for six months more.
- Utilisé au milieu de la phrase
Definition of more in English Dictionary
- Partie du discours Hiérarchie
- Adverbes
- Adverbes Degré
- Adverbes incomparable
- Adverbes Degré
- Déterminants
- Noms
- Noms Dénombrable
- Singularia tantum
- Noms Indénombrable
- Noms Indénombrable
- Noms Dénombrable
- Verbes
- Verbes transitifs
- Verbes transitifs
- Adverbes
Source: Wiktionnaire