- OTHER | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary
Other means ‘additional or extra’, or ‘alternative’, or ‘different types of’ … The other with a singular noun means the second of two things or people, or the opposite of a set of two: … When we use the indefinite article an before other, we write it as one word: another
- OTHER Definition Meaning | Dictionary. com
Other definition: additional or further See examples of OTHER used in a sentence
- Other - definition of other by The Free Dictionary
2 (a) different (one or ones from that or those already specified or understood): he found some other house; no other man but you; other days were happier 3 additional; further: there are no other possibilities 4 (preceded by every) alternate; two: it buzzes every other minute
- OTHER definition in American English | Collins English Dictionary
You use other to refer to an additional thing or person of the same type as one that has been mentioned or is known about They were just like any other young couple Other is also a pronoun Four crew members were killed, one other was injured
- other adjective - Definition, pictures, pronunciation and usage notes . . .
Definition of other adjective in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more
- Other - Wikipedia
Other: British and Irish Poetry since 1970, a 1999 poetry anthology The Other (Applegate novel), a 2000 Animorphs novel by K A Applegate The Other (Tryon novel), a 1971 horror novel by Tom Tryon "The Other" (short story), a 1972 short story by Jorge Luis Borges The Other, a 2008 novel by David Guterson Spider-Man: "The Other", a 2005–2006 Marvel Comics crossover story arc
- other - WordReference. com Dictionary of English
(a) different (one or ones from that or those already specified or understood): they found some other house, no other person but you, other days were happier additional; further: there are no other possibilities
- Other Definition Meaning - YourDictionary
Different or distinct from that or those referred to or implied Use your other foot, not Jane but some other girl
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