82 lines
5.2 KiB
JSON
82 lines
5.2 KiB
JSON
{
|
|
"else":{
|
|
"antonyms":[
|
|
"added",
|
|
"additional",
|
|
"another",
|
|
"farther",
|
|
"fresh",
|
|
"further",
|
|
"more",
|
|
"other"
|
|
],
|
|
"definitions":{
|
|
": being different in identity":[
|
|
"it must have been somebody else"
|
|
],
|
|
": being in addition":[
|
|
"what else did he say"
|
|
],
|
|
": if not : otherwise":[
|
|
"leave or else you'll be sorry",
|
|
"\u2014 used absolutely to express a threat do what I tell you or else"
|
|
],
|
|
": in a different manner or place or at a different time":[
|
|
"how else could he have acted",
|
|
"here and nowhere else"
|
|
],
|
|
": in an additional manner or place or at an additional time":[
|
|
"where else is gold found"
|
|
],
|
|
": other :":[]
|
|
},
|
|
"examples":[
|
|
"Adverb",
|
|
"We decided to go someplace else for dinner.",
|
|
"if you could do it over again, how else would you have done it",
|
|
"Adjective",
|
|
"is there anything else you would like to add to your list",
|
|
"Recent Examples on the Web: Adverb",
|
|
"Which brings me to Los Angeles, where the sun always shines and few care what anyone else does. \u2014 Los Angeles Times , 26 June 2022",
|
|
"Phoenix can not only match it, but also pay him more than anyone else with a five-year max deal for $177 million or a four-year max deal for $136 million. \u2014 Duane Rankin, The Arizona Republic , 25 June 2022",
|
|
"On Monday, June 27, members of the P4 will be holding a listening meeting with our Women at ServiceNow Employee Belonging Group\u2014and anyone else who wishes to join. \u2014 Paige Mcglauflin, Fortune , 25 June 2022",
|
|
"The prefade enables the podcast host or producer to hear the input channel without anyone else hearing it. \u2014 Mark Sparrow, Forbes , 24 June 2022",
|
|
"The group went to work pulling, cutting and digging out weeds, roots and debris to create a trail that, once completed, can be used by mountain bikers, hikers, walkers, joggers, birders or anyone else , for free. \u2014 Katie V. Jones, Baltimore Sun , 22 June 2022",
|
|
"The heads of these firms, like Yass, reported incomes larger than almost anyone else in the country from 2013 to 2018. \u2014 Jeff Ernsthausen, ProPublica , 21 June 2022",
|
|
"The major signs of PPD aren\u2019t much different from the symptoms of anyone else experiencing typical anxiety or depression; the signs can include feeling overwhelmed, hopeless, withdrawn, uninterested and overly worried. \u2014 Fox News , 20 June 2022",
|
|
"Officers had been to the condo the previous evening on a report of a disturbance there involving Chambers, but left after being unable to make contact with him or anyone else inside, Shebloski said. \u2014 City News Service, San Diego Union-Tribune , 20 June 2022",
|
|
"Recent Examples on the Web: Adjective",
|
|
"But there\u2019s little else voters approve of, and Democratic strategists believe that knocking Trump on the economy could be his campaign\u2019s death knell. \u2014 Nicole Goodkind, Fortune , 9 July 2020",
|
|
"My resting state is giving someone else attention -- not actually receiving it. \u2014 Brooke Baldwin, CNN , 19 Apr. 2020",
|
|
"And no different than anyone else tests and launches, et cetera. \u2014 Time Staff, Time , 20 June 2019",
|
|
"These can be chores (do a load of laundry), exercise (bang out a set of push-ups), or something else (break for coffee and tea). \u2014 Fortune Editors, Fortune , 27 Mar. 2020",
|
|
"There are also interviews, bedtime stories, and everything else celebrities can come up with to keep our spirits afloat. \u2014 Kathryn Lindsay, refinery29.com , 19 Mar. 2020",
|
|
"To put him on the 40-man, and thus give him a chance to get called up in September, the Rockies would have had to cut somebody else and risk losing them on waivers. \u2014 Patrick Saunders, The Denver Post , 10 Sep. 2019",
|
|
"Have a question about the Senate trial or something else impeachment-related",
|
|
"But events since then have been so fast-paced and chaotic by the standards of Mr. Putin\u2019s deliberate, no-drama style of domestic leadership that many observers now wonder whether something else might be afoot. \u2014 Anton Troianovski, New York Times , 21 Jan. 2020"
|
|
],
|
|
"first_known_use":{
|
|
"before the 12th century, in the meaning defined above":"Adjective",
|
|
"before the 12th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1a":"Adverb"
|
|
},
|
|
"history_and_etymology":{
|
|
"Middle English elles, going back to Old English elles, adverbial use of genitive singular neuter of elle \"other,\" going back to Germanic *alja- \"other\" (whence, with parallel formation, Old High German alles, elles \"else,\" Gothic aljis ), going back to Indo-European *h 2 el-i\u032fo-, whence also Latin alius \"other,\" Old Irish aile, Middle Welsh eil \"second,\" Greek \u00e1llos \"other,\" Armenian ayl, Tocharian B allek \"other, another\"":"Adverb",
|
|
"Middle English elles, going back to Old English \u2014 more at else entry 1":"Adjective"
|
|
},
|
|
"pronounciation":[
|
|
"\u02c8els",
|
|
"\u02c8el(t)s"
|
|
],
|
|
"synonym_discussion":"",
|
|
"synonyms":[
|
|
"differently",
|
|
"other (than)",
|
|
"otherwise"
|
|
],
|
|
"time_of_retrieval":"20220706-164442",
|
|
"type":[
|
|
"adjective",
|
|
"adverb"
|
|
]
|
|
}
|
|
} |