-
1 Past
prep.Beyond: P. and V. πέρα (gen.).Exceeding: P, and V. ὑπέρ (acc.).Past description: use P. and V. κρείσσων λόγου, or V. κρείσσων ἢ λέξαι.Past bearing: use intolerable.Go past: P. and V. παρέρχεσθαι.——————adj.Gone, vanished: Ar. and V. φροῦδος (rare P.).Of time: P. and V. παρελθών, P. παρεληλυθώς.Past time: P. and V. ὁ παρελθὼν χρόνος.Past actions: P. τὰ γεγενημένα.Things past and done: V. ἐξειργασμένα, τά.In the past: use adv., P. and V. πάλαι.Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Past
-
2 most
[məust] 1. superlative of many, much (often with the) - adjective1) ((the) greatest number or quantity of: Which of the students has read the most books?; Reading is what gives me most enjoyment.) (ο)περισσότερος,(οι)περισσότεροι2) (the majority or greater part of: Most children like playing games; Most modern music is difficult to understand.) (ο)περισσότερος,(οι)περισσότεροι2. adverb1) (used to form the superlative of many adjectives and adverbs, especially those of more than two syllables: Of all the women I know, she's the most beautiful; the most delicious cake I've ever tasted; We see her mother or father sometimes, but we see her grandmother most frequently.) (ο)πιο,(ο)περισσότερο2) (to the greatest degree or extent: They like sweets and biscuits but they like ice-cream most of all.) πιο πολύ3) (very or extremely: I'm most grateful to you for everything you've done; a most annoying child.) λίαν,εξαιρετικά4) ((American) almost: Most everyone I know has read that book.) σχεδόν3. pronoun1) (the greatest number or quantity: I ate two cakes, but Mary ate more, and John ate (the) most.) (το)περισσότερο2) (the greatest part; the majority: He'll be at home for most of the day; Most of these students speak English; Everyone is leaving - most have gone already.) οι περισσότεροι, το μεγαλύτερο μέρος•- mostly- at the most
- at most
- for the most part
- make the most of something
- make the most of
См. также в других словарях:
go and do something — spoken 1) used for saying that someone has done something silly or annoying She s only gone and told him what the surprise was! have gone and done it (= have done something extremely silly): You ve really gone and done it this time! 2) used for… … English dictionary
have a field day — {v. phr.} To enjoy great success or unlimited opportunity. * /The visiting basketball team was so weak that our school had a field day scoring one point after another./ … Dictionary of American idioms
have a field day — {v. phr.} To enjoy great success or unlimited opportunity. * /The visiting basketball team was so weak that our school had a field day scoring one point after another./ … Dictionary of American idioms
Gone with the Wind — This article is about the novel. For the film, see Gone with the Wind (film). For other uses, see Gone with the Wind (disambiguation). Gone With the Wind … Wikipedia
Gone with the Wind (film) — Infobox Film name = Gone With The Wind image size = 215px caption = original release poster director = Victor Fleming Uncredited: George Cukor Sam Wood producer = David O. Selznick writer = Screenplay: Sidney Howard Novel: Margaret Mitchell… … Wikipedia
have — v. & n. v. (3rd sing. present has; past and past part. had) v.tr. 1 hold in possession as one s property or at one s disposal; be provided with (has a car; had no time to read; has nothing to wear). 2 hold in a certain relationship (has a sister; … Useful english dictionary
have — I [[t]həv, STRONG hæv[/t]] AUXILIARY VERB USES ♦ has, having, had (In spoken English, forms of have are often shortened, for example I have is shortened to I ve and has not is shortened to hasn t.) 1) AUX You use the forms have and has with a… … English dictionary
have — [c]/hæv / (say hav) verb (present singular 1 have, 2 have or, Archaic, hast has or, Archaic, hath, plural have …
done — adjective 1) the job is done Syn: finished, ended, concluded, complete, completed, accomplished, achieved, fulfilled, discharged, executed; informal wrapped up, sewn up, polished off Ant: incomplete 2) … Thesaurus of popular words
been vs gone — been is the past participle of be gone is the past participle of go Been can be used to describe completed journeys. So if you have been to England twice, you have travelled there and back twice. For example: I ve been to Africa, but I ve … English dictionary of common mistakes and confusing words
been vs gone — been is the past participle of be gone is the past participle of go Been can be used to describe completed journeys. So if you have been to England twice, you have travelled there and back twice. For example: I ve been to Africa, but I ve … English dictionary of common mistakes and confusing words