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Common
det
•
In Comparative of lang=en:
comparative degree
of many: in
greater
number. (Used for a
discrete
quantity
.)
•
In Comparative of lang=en:
comparative degree
of much: in
greater
quantity
,
amount
, or
proportion
. (Used for a
continuous
quantity
.)
•
Additional
; further.
•
Bigger
,
stronger
, or more
valuable
.
adv
•
To a
greater
degree
or
extent
.
•
Used to form the
comparative
form of
adjectives
and
adverbs
.
•
In
negative
constructions
: any further,
any longer
;
any more
.
•
Used
in addition to
an
inflected
comparative
form.
noun
•
A
carrot
; a
parsnip
.
•
A
root
;
stock
.
•
A
plant
;
flower
;
shrub
.
pron
•
A
greater
number or
quantity
(of something).
•
An
extra
or
additional
quantity
(of something).
verb
•
To
root up
.
name
•
The Volta-Congo
language
of the
Mossi
people,
mainly
spoken
in part
of
Burkina Faso
.
•
A
surname
, from
Scottish Gaelic
.
Sourced from
Wiktionary
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more
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Similar
mo
carrot
moar
mo'
moor
Related
greater
bigger
better
extra
higher
smarter
further
closer
longer
stronger
much
larger
faster
older
easier
harder
smaller
lesser
farther
louder
weaker
richer
deeper
wider
quicker
enough
new
others
many
clearer
plenty
good
sooner
cheaper
things
lower
huge
heavier
happier
twice
different
something
additional
simpler
shorter
lighter
later
bit
say
additionally
several
another
safer
other
too much
so much
as much
something else
More
Opposite
fewer
less
Rhymes
ore
war
for
oar
cor
pure
hoar
door
soar
cure
lore
core
Thor
Muir
your
more
yore
poor
pore
rore
tour
roar
moor
tore
four
Dore
pour
bore
wore
sore
gore
o'er
fore
boar
spore
afore
shore
corps
store
snore
ybore
adore
chore
floor
crore
swore
score
fore-
funny
whore
aroar
abore
decor
s'more
insure
galore
mature
before
bewore
ensure
ignore
ashore
anymore
obscure
implore
procure
explore
deplore
restore
metaphor
Fervidor
Elsinore
hardcore
albacore
Messidor
Fructidor
multicore
Thermidor
man-of-war
kwashiorkor
xenophyophore
any more
louis d'or
More
Lineage
more
English
more
Middle English (1100-1500)
mara
Old English (ca. 450-1100)
moren
Middle English (1100-1500)
Sourced from
Etym
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