What is the meaning of ELSE. Phrases containing ELSE
See meanings and uses of ELSE!ELSE
ELSE
ELSE
ELSE
ELSE
ELSE
Acronyms & AI meanings
hippocampal temporal lobe seizures
South West Regional Operations
Universal Keyboard
Abnormal Involuntary Movement Scale
Center for Advanced Polymer Engineering Research, Materials Science and Engineering
Black Panther Party for Self Defense
Elektro Phalasteeni
Comprehensive Insurance Brokers Limited
ELSE
ELSE
ELSE
v. i.
To barter, or to buy and sell; to be engaged in the exchange, purchase, or sale of goods, wares, merchandise, or anything else; to traffic; to bargain; to carry on commerce as a business.
a. & pron.
Other; one or something beside; as, Who else is coming? What else shall I give? Do you expect anything else?
n.
Destruction or surrender of anything for the sake of something else; devotion of some desirable object in behalf of a higher object, or to a claim deemed more pressing; hence, also, the thing so devoted or given up; as, the sacrifice of interest to pleasure, or of pleasure to interest.
adv.
To some, or any, other place; as, you will have to go elsewhither for it.
a.
Of or pertaining to all or any of the Territories of the United States, or to any district similarly organized elsewhere; as, Territorial governments.
n.
A small pipe forming part of the boiler, containing water and surrounded by flame or hot gases, or else surrounded by water and forming a flue for the gases to pass through.
n.
A stone, block of wood, or anything else, placed under a wheel or barrel to prevent motion; a scotch; a skid.
v. t.
To write under something else; to subscribe.
v. t.
To change to something else; to transmute; to exchange; to alternate.
adv.
In any other place; as, these trees are not to be found elsewhere.
adv. & conj.
Besides; except that mentioned; in addition; as, nowhere else; no one else.
a.
Lying across; being in a direction across something else; as, paths cut with traverse trenches.
adv.
In some other place; in other places, indefinitely; as, it is reported in town and elsewhere.
a.
Situated or placed across something else; transverse; oblique.
adv.
An inseparable prefix, or particle, signifying not; in-; non-. In- is prefixed mostly to words of Latin origin, or else to words formed by Latin suffixes; un- is of much wider application, and is attached at will to almost any adjective, or participle used adjectively, or adverb, from which it may be desired to form a corresponding negative adjective or adverb, and is also, but less freely, prefixed to nouns. Un- sometimes has merely an intensive force; as in unmerciless, unremorseless.
a.
Being one of a pair much resembling one another; standing the relation of a twin to something else; -- often followed by to or with.
adv.
Not there; elsewhere; absent.
n.
A large bulrush (Scirpus lacustris, and S. Tatora) growing abundantly on overflowed land in California and elsewhere.
adv.
Those which have acquired an opposed or contrary, instead of a merely negative, meaning; as, unfriendly, ungraceful, unpalatable, unquiet, and the like; or else an intensive sense more than a prefixed not would express; as, unending, unparalleled, undisciplined, undoubted, unsafe, and the like.
n.
A Burman measure of twelve miles. V () V, the twenty-second letter of the English alphabet, is a vocal consonant. V and U are only varieties of the same character, U being the cursive form, while V is better adapted for engraving, as in stone. The two letters were formerly used indiscriminately, and till a comparatively recent date words containing them were often classed together in dictionaries and other books of reference (see U). The letter V is from the Latin alphabet, where it was used both as a consonant (about like English w) and as a vowel. The Latin derives it from it from a form (V) of the Greek vowel / (see Y), this Greek letter being either from the same Semitic letter as the digamma F (see F), or else added by the Greeks to the alphabet which they took from the Semitic. Etymologically v is most nearly related to u, w, f, b, p; as in vine, wine; avoirdupois, habit, have; safe, save; trover, troubadour, trope. See U, F, etc.
ELSE
ELSE