dict_dl/en_MerriamWebster/els_MW.json
2022-07-10 04:31:07 +00:00

82 lines
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{
"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of anyone else experiencing typical anxiety or depression; the signs can include feeling overwhelmed, hopeless, withdrawn, uninterested and overly worried.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"
]
}
}