Adv Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Adv. Here they are! All 48 of them:

awhile, adv. I love the vagueness of words that involve time. 'It took him awhile to come back' -- it could be a matter of minutes or hours, days or years. It is easy for me to say it took me awhile to know. That is about as accurate as I can get. There were sneak previews of knowing, for sure. Instance that made me feel, oh, this could be right, But the moment I shifted from a hope that needed to be proven to a certainty that would be continually challenged? There's no pinpointing that. Perhaps it never happened. Perhaps it happened while I was asleep. Most likely, there's no signal event. There's just the steady accumulation of 'awhile'.
David Levithan (The Lover's Dictionary)
better, adj. and adv. Will it ever get better? It better. Will it ever get better? It better. Will it ever get better? It better.
David Levithan (The Lover's Dictionary)
You don't know what you can accomplish if you never try.
Dennis K. Hausker (Echo Three Tango)
People who are crazy enough to think they can change the world are the only ones who do." - Apple Adv.
Gary Keller (The One Thing: The Surprisingly Simple Truth Behind Extraordinary Results)
consumers cannot xist without 3-D and AdV, but humans once did and still can.
David Mitchell (Cloud Atlas)
fuck VULGAR SLANG  v. [trans.] 1 have sexual intercourse with (someone).  [intrans.] (of two people) have sexual intercourse. 2 ruin or damage (something).  n. an act of sexual intercourse.  [with adj.] a sexual partner.  exclam. used alone or as a noun (the fuck) or a verb in various phrases to express anger, annoyance, contempt, impatience, or surprise, or simply for emphasis.    go fuck yourself an exclamation expressing anger or contempt for, or rejection of, someone.  not give a fuck (about) used to emphasize indifference or contempt.    fuck around spend time doing unimportant or trivial things.  have sexual intercourse with a variety of partners.  (fuck around with) meddle with.  fuck off [usu. in imperative] (of a person) go away.  fuck someone over treat someone in an unfair or humiliating way.  fuck someone up damage or confuse someone emotionally.  fuck something up (or fuck up) do something badly or ineptly.   fuck·a·ble adj.  early 16th cent.: of Germanic origin (compare Swedish dialect focka and Dutch dialect fokkelen); possibly from an Indo-European root meaning 'strike', shared by Latin pugnus 'fist'.   Despite the wideness and proliferation of its use in many sections of society, the word fuck remains (and has been for centuries) one of the most taboo words in English. Until relatively recently, it rarely appeared in print; even today, there are a number of euphemistic ways of referring to it in speech and writing, e.g., the F-word, f***, or fk. fuck·er  n. VULGAR SLANG a contemptible or stupid person (often used as a general term of abuse). fuck·head  n. VULGAR SLANG a stupid or contemptible person (often used as a general term of abuse). fuck·ing  adj. [attrib.] & adv. [as submodifier] VULGAR SLANG used for emphasis or to express anger, annoyance, contempt, or surprise. fuck-me  adj. VULGAR SLANG (of clothing, esp. shoes) inviting or perceived as inviting sexual interest. fuck-up  n. VULGAR SLANG a mess or muddle.  a person who has a tendency to make a mess of things. fuck·wit  n. CHIEFLY BRIT., VULGAR SLANG a stupid or contemptible person (often used as a general term of abuse). fu·coid
Oxford University Press (The New Oxford American Dictionary)
Fais ce que dois, adv[ienne que pourra]" Proverbio Francés, última frase del diario de Tolstói (p.172)
Leo Tolstoy
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Advocate Asish ku Mukharjee
Interpretis officium est, non quid ipse velit, sed quid sentiat ille quem interpretatur, exponere,” Hieron. Apol. adv. Rufin.;—for when the mind is really affected with the discovery of truth itself, it will be guided and directed in the declaration of it unto others.
John Owen (The Holy Spirit (Vintage Puritan))
aguets /ozagɛ/ loc adv • être aux ~ (à l'affût) to lie in wait; (se méfier) to be on one's guard; (surveiller de près) to be watching like a hawk
Synapse Développement (Oxford Hachette French - English Dictionary (French Edition))
incidemment /ɛ̃sidamɑ̃/ adv 1. (au passage) in passing 2. (par hasard) by chance
Synapse Développement (Oxford Hachette French - English Dictionary (French Edition))
aveuglette /alavœglɛt/ loc adv 1. (à tâtons) • avancer à l'~ | to grope one's way along • se diriger à l'~ vers la sortie | to grope one's way towards the exit 2. (au hasard) [tirer, se lancer] blindly; [choisir, distribuer] at random; [décider, agir] in an inconsidered way
Synapse Développement (Oxford Hachette French - English Dictionary (French Edition))
nullement /nylmɑ̃/ adv not at all • je ne suis ~ impressionné | I'm not at all impressed • ~ effrayé, il pénétra dans la pièce | not at all frightened, he went into the room • il n'est ~ question de faire | there's absolutely no question of doing • n'avoir ~ l'intention de faire | to have absolutely no intention of doing • il n'est ~ homme d'affaires | he is not a business man at all
Synapse Développement (Oxford Hachette French - English Dictionary (French Edition))
outre1 /utʀ/ I. prép (en plus de) in addition to • ~ les problèmes mentionnés/cette mesure | in addition to the problems mentioned/this measure • ~ (le fait) qu'il écrit, il illustre ses livres | as well as writing, he also illustrates his books • ~ (le fait) qu'elles sont illégales, ces activités ne sont pas rentables | as well as being illegal, the activities are not profitable II. adv • passer ~ | to pay no heed • elle sait que c'est interdit mais elle passe ~ | she knows it's forbidden but she pays no heed ou carries on regardless • passer ~ à | to disregard ou override [loi, décision, objection] III. loc adv unduly • cela ne m'inquiète/m'étonne pas ~ mesure | it doesn't worry me/surprise me unduly IV. loc adv in addition • cette machine nous permettra, en ~, de faire | in addition, this machine will allow us to do
Synapse Développement (Oxford Hachette French - English Dictionary (French Edition))
tâtonner /tɑtɔne/ vi to grope about ou around • avancer en tâtonnant | (lit) (fig) to grope one's way along • on tâtonne (dans des recherches) we're groping in the dark tâtons /atɑtɔ̃/ loc adv • avancer à ~ | (lit) (fig) to feel one's way along
Synapse Développement (Oxford Hachette French - English Dictionary (French Edition))
The supreme being must be unique, without equal… If God is not one, he is not God’ (Tertullian, Adv. Marc, 1, 5, 3: PL 2, 274).
Catholic Church (Catechism of the Catholic Church)
If you lⅳe long eno㎍h, you'ᄔ ㎃ke mistakes. But if you ᇉarn from them, you'ᄔ be a better pe₨on. It's how you ㏊ndᇉ adve₨ity, not how it affecʦ you. The ㎃㏌ th㏌g is never quit, never quit, never quit.
Juxerxes
ineludiblemente adv. m. De modo ineludible.
Real Academia Española (Diccionario de la lengua española)
To ADVENE  (ADVE'NE)   v.n.[advenio, Lat.]To accede to something; to become part of something else, without being essential; to be superadded. A sixth cause considered in judicature, is stiled an accidental cause; and the accidental of any act, is said to be whatever advenes to the act itself already substantiated.Ayliffe’sParergon.
Samuel Johnson (A Dictionary of the English Language (Complete and Unabridged in Two Volumes), Volume One)
ADVENTURE  (ADVE'NTURE)   n.s.[French.]1. An accident; a chance; a hazard; an event of which we have no direction. The general summoned three castles that were near: one desperate of succour, and not desirous to dispute the defence, presently yielded; but two stood upon their adventure.Sir John Hayward.2. In this sense is used the phrase, at all adventures;[à l’adventure, Fr.]By chance; without any rational scheme.
Samuel Johnson (A Dictionary of the English Language (Complete and Unabridged in Two Volumes), Volume One)
ADRY  (ADRY')   adv.[from a and dry.]Athirst; thirsty; in want of drink. He never told any of them, that he was his humble servant, but his well-wisher; and would rather be thought a malecontent, than drink the king’s health when he was not adry.Spect.
Samuel Johnson (A Dictionary of the English Language (Complete and Unabridged in Two Volumes), Volume One)
ADVENIENT  (ADVE'NIENT)   adj.[adveniens, Lat.]Advening; coming from outward causes; superadded.
Samuel Johnson (A Dictionary of the English Language (Complete and Unabridged in Two Volumes), Volume One)
ADVENTINE  (ADVE'NTINE)   adj.[from advenio, adventum.]Adventitious; that which is extrinsically added; that which comes from outward causes: a word scarcely in use. As for the peregrine heat, it is thus far true, that, if the proportion of the adventine heat be greatly predominant to the natural heat and spirits of the body, it tendeth to dissolution or notable alteration.Bacon’sNatural History,No 836.
Samuel Johnson (A Dictionary of the English Language (Complete and Unabridged in Two Volumes), Volume One)
To ADVESPERATE  (ADVE'SPERATE)   v.n.[advespero, Lat.] To draw towards evening.Dict.
Samuel Johnson (A Dictionary of the English Language (Complete and Unabridged in Two Volumes), Volume One)
ADIEU  (ADIEU')   adv.[from à Dieu, used elliptically for à Dieu je vous commende, used at the departure of friends.]The form
Samuel Johnson (A Dictionary of the English Language (Complete and Unabridged in Two Volumes), Volume One)
AMORT  (AMO'RT)   adv.[à la mort, Fr.]In the state of the dead; dejected; depressed; spiritless. How fares my Kate? what, sweeting, all amort?Shakespeare’sTaming of the Shrew.
Samuel Johnson (A Dictionary of the English Language (Complete and Unabridged in Two Volumes), Volume One)
AMEN  (A'MEN)   adv.[A word of which the original has given rise to many conjectures. Scaliger writes, that it is Arabick; and the Rabbies make it the compound of the initials of three words, signifying the Lord is a faithful king; but the word seems merely Hebrew, , which, with a long train of derivatives, signifies firmness, certainty, fidelity.]A term
Samuel Johnson (A Dictionary of the English Language (Complete and Unabridged in Two Volumes), Volume One)
plain-pied /dəplɛ̃pje/ I. loc adj 1. (à un étage) • un bâtiment de ~ | a single-storey (GB) ou single-story (US) building • une maison de ~ | a single-storey (GB)ou; single-story (US); house, a bungalow (GB) • l'école est de ~ | the school only has one storey (GB)ou; story (US) • la cuisine est de ~ avec le jardin | the kitchen is at the same level as the garden (GB)ou; yard (US)ou; is on a level with the garden (GB)ou; yard (US) 2. (à égalité) • être de ~ avec qn | to be on an equal footing with sb II. loc adv • entrer de ~ dans le monde politique | to have an easy passage into the world of politics • passer de ~ de la philosophie à la finance | to be equally at home discussing philosophy or finance
Synapse Développement (Oxford Hachette French - English Dictionary (French Edition))
céans /seɑ̃/ adv here • le maître de ~ | the master of the house
Synapse Développement (Oxford Hachette French - English Dictionary (French Edition))
illico /iliko/ adv straightaway, sharpish (familier) • ~ presto (informal) | pronto (familier)
Synapse Développement (Oxford Hachette French - English Dictionary (French Edition))
guingois /degɛ̃gwa/ loc adv • être de ~ | [meuble, maison] to be lopsided • aller de ~ | to go askew
Synapse Développement (Oxford Hachette French - English Dictionary (French Edition))
champ /ʃɑ̃/ I. nm 1. (terre cultivable) field • dans un ~ de colza | in a field of rapeseed • des ~s de coton | cotton fields • couper or prendre à travers ~s | to cut across the fields • travailler aux ~s | to work in the fields • se promener dans les ~s | to walk in the fields • en pleins ~s | in open country 2. (étendue) field • ~ de glace | ice field • ~ de neige | snowfield • ~ pétrolifère or de pétrole | oil field • ~ de dunes | dunes (pl) 3. (domaine) field • mon ~ d'action/de recherche | my field of action/of research • le ~ culturel/politique | the cultural/political arena • le ~ des polémiques/investigations | the scope of the controversies/investigations • le ~ est libre, on peut y aller | (lit) the coast is clear, we can go; (fig) the way is clear, we can go • avoir le ~ libre | to have a free hand • laisser le ~ libre à qn | (gén) to give sb a free hand(en se retirant) to make way for sb 4. field • le ~ visuel | the field of vision • être dans le ~ | to be in shot • entrer dans le/sortir du ~ | to come into/go out of shot • être hors ~ | [personnage] to be offscreen ou out of shot • une voix hors ~ | an offscreen voice • prendre du ~ | (fig) to stand back 5. field • ~ acoustique/électrique/magnétique | sound/electric/magnetic field 6. field • ~ conceptuel/dérivationnel/lexical/sémantique | conceptual/derivational/lexical/semantic field 7. field • ~ de vecteurs/scalaires/tenseurs | vector/scalar/tensor field 8. field II. loc adv all the time voir aussi: sur-le-champ III. Idiome • mourir au champ d'honneur | to be killed in action
Synapse Développement (Oxford Hachette French - English Dictionary (French Edition))
fougue /fug/ nf enthusiasm fougueusement /fugøzmɑ̃/ adv enthusiastically fougueux /fugø, øz/ adj [cheval] spirited; [personne, élan, déclaration] enthusiastic
Synapse Développement (Oxford Hachette French - English Dictionary (French Edition))
complaisamment /kɔ̃plɛzamɑ̃/ adv 1. (aimablement) obligingly 2. (avec trop d'indulgence) indulgently 3. (avec autosatisfaction) complacently complaisance /kɔ̃plɛzɑ̃s/ nf 1. (volonté de faire plaisir) kindness, readiness to oblige • avoir la ~ de faire | to be kind enough to do • faire qch par ~ | to do sth to oblige ou out of kindness • sourire de ~ | polite smile • certificat médical de ~ | medical certificate delivered by an obliging doctor • pavillon de ~ | flag of convenience 2. (indulgence excessive) • la ~ d'un père à l'égard de ses enfants | a father's indulgence toward(s) his children • leur ~ à l'égard du régime | their soft attitude toward(s) the regime, the fact that they condone the regime • décrire la situation sans ~ | to give an objective assessment of the situation • un portrait sans ~ | a candid portrait 3. (autosatisfaction) complacency, smugness • il s'écoute avec ~ | he likes the sound of his own voice
Synapse Développement (Oxford Hachette French - English Dictionary (French Edition))
subit /sybi, it/ adj sudden subitement /sybitmɑ̃/ adv suddenly, all of a sudden
Synapse Développement (Oxford Hachette French - English Dictionary (French Edition))
soi-disant /swadizɑ̃/ I. adj inv - (before n) 1. (qui prétend être) self-styled 2. (prétendu) (controv) [démocratie, liberté, miracle] so-called (épith) II. loc adv (prétendument) supposedly • il n'est pas allé à l'école ~ parce qu'il est malade | he hasn't gone to school, supposedly because he's ill • elle a ~ la migraine | she has a migraine, or so she says • ~ que | it would appear that
Synapse Développement (Oxford Hachette French - English Dictionary (French Edition))
intra-muros /ɛ̃tʀamyʀos/ I. loc adj • de Paris ~ à la grande banlieue | from the very heart of Paris to the outermost suburbs II. loc adv [construire, habiter] in ou within the town itself
Synapse Développement (Oxford Hachette French - English Dictionary (French Edition))
fatalement /fatalmɑ̃/ adv inevitably • ~, les ventes vont chuter | sales will inevitably fall • ça devait ~ échouer | it was bound to fail
Synapse Développement (Oxford Hachette French - English Dictionary (French Edition))
improviste /alɛ̃pʀɔvist/ loc adv unexpectedly
Synapse Développement (Oxford Hachette French - English Dictionary (French Edition))
mégarde /paʀmegaʀd/ loc adv inadvertently
Synapse Développement (Oxford Hachette French - English Dictionary (French Edition))
éventuel /evɑ̃tɥɛl/ adj 1. (possible) possible; [client] potential 2. conditional éventuellement /evɑ̃tɥɛlmɑ̃/ adv possibly • il y aura Paul et ~ Nicole | Paul will be there and possibly Nicole • cela pourrait ~ servir | that might be useful • ~ nous prendrons le train | we could take the train • ‘tu viendras?’—‘~’ | ‘will you come?’—‘I might’ • je relis et ~ je corrige | I reread and if necessary I correct
Synapse Développement (Oxford Hachette French - English Dictionary (French Edition))
/odəɔʀ/ adv 1. (lit) outside • il a des contacts ~ | he has contacts outside • il pleuvait ~ | it was raining outside • le liquide s'écoule ~ | the liquid is oozing out • ‘ne pas se pencher ~’ | ‘do not lean out of the window’ 2. (fig) outwardly • ~ elle paraît froide mais elle est en fait très chaleureuse | outwardly she appears cold, but she is in fact very warm
Synapse Développement (Oxford Hachette French - English Dictionary (French Edition))
Across the top was printing in gold letters: All intentional lies, in adv., editorial, news, or any other column... Scarlet All malicious matter... Crimson All careless or ignorant mistakes... Pink All for direct self-interest of owner... Dark green All mere bait—to sell the paper... Bright green All advertising, primary or secondary... Brown All sensational and salacious matter... Yellow All hired hypocrisy... Purple Good fun, instruction and entertainment... Blue True and necessary news and honest editorials... Ordinary print You never saw such a crazy quilt of a paper.
Elsinore Books (Classic Short Stories: The Complete Collection: All 100 Masterpieces)
Some days, it feels like my destiny is not of my own choosing. I move forward one day, and get pushed back another. I try to resist, but only get pushed back harder. Each new step becomes a challenge, every choice a question. I’m equipped. I’ve prepared for this. For the moment when, maybe, I’ll be pushed to my limits.
Elsa Charretier (STAR WARS ADV FORCES OF DESTINY LEIA CVR A)
sitôt /sito/ I. adv - Sitôt conjonction et préposition se traduit le plus souvent par as soon as. Mais attention au choix du temps: sitôt rentré de voyage (qu'il rentrera) = as soon as he gets back from his trip; (qu'il est rentré) = as soon as he got back from his trip; sitôt la fin du mauvais temps (dans le passé) = as soon as the bad weather had passed(dans l'avenir) = as soon as the bad weather has passed.I • ~ après (tout de suite) immediately after; (peu de temps) soon after • elle est arrivée ~ après | she arrived soon afterwards • nous partirons ~ après | we'll leave immediately afterwards • je n'y retournerai pas de ~ | I won't go back there in a hurry (familier) II. conj, prép - Sitôt conjonction et préposition se traduit le plus souvent par as soon as. Mais attention au choix du temps: sitôt rentré de voyage (qu'il rentrera) = as soon as he gets back from his trip; (qu'il est rentré) = as soon as he got back from his trip; sitôt la fin du mauvais temps (dans le passé) = as soon as the bad weather had passed(dans l'avenir) = as soon as the bad weather has passed.II • ~ que | as soon as • ~ qu'ils arriveront, ~ leur arrivée | as soon as they come III. Idiome • sitôt dit, sitôt fait† | no sooner said than done
Synapse Développement (Oxford Hachette French - English Dictionary (French Edition))
and recrimination.  late 17th cent.: from early modern Dutch (denoting a mythical whirlpool supposed to exist in the Arctic Ocean, west of Norway), from maalen 'grind, whirl' + stroom 'stream'. mae·nad   n. (in ancient Greece) a female follower of Bacchus, traditionally associated with divine possession and frenzied rites.   mae·nad·icadj.  late 16th cent.: via Latin from Greek Mainas, Mainad-, from mainesthai 'to rave'. ma·es·to·so [MUSIC]   adv. & adj. (esp. as a direction) in a majestic manner.   n. (pl.-sos) a movement or passage marked to be performed in this way.  Italian, 'majestic', based on Latin majestas 'majesty'. maes·tro   n. (pl.maes·tri or maes·tros) a distinguished musician, esp. a conductor of classical music.  a great or distinguished figure in any sphere: a movie maestro.  early 18th cent.: Italian, 'master', from Latin magister.
Oxford University Press (The New Oxford American Dictionary)
To understand this, you need frist to Know some words which are formed from Arabic to English by me : 1- farcashize (V) : يُفركش 2- farcashization (N) : الفركشة 3- farcashized/farcashizational (Adj) : مُفركش 4- farcashizationally (Adv) : مُفركشآ The logic of the dating does not express the relationship, it is the relationship, otherwise the time that I spend with special someone is a neutral phenomenon and the observation of the neutral phenomenon in the term of the relationships changes its nature. Like every single Sudanese man, I know that I would like to be a one-man multinational fashion phenomenon but to be described as farcashizational man by some students is something I don't expect it at all. The phenomenon of farcashization becomes a part of Sudanese girl's speech, unfortunately it is like gossiping, I was chicken-hearted when my closed friend told me that many female students at EDC said that we were in love together and then you were farcashized by me. At that time we were laughing but deeply inside myself, an idea was rambling which was "maybe I am one of their desires" because when one has achieved the object of one's desires, it is evident that one's real desire was not the ignorant possession of the desired object but to know it as possessed as actually contemplated as within one, so maybe I was farcashizationally farcashized by my friend in thier mind as a wish that the same thing to be done with me by them and that leads to say "girls are dangerous creatures especially when they are your students". When there is both love and friendship, we dwell in the realm of the relationship and when there is neither love nor friendship, we exist in a vacuity of relationships, we can feel and we can express feelings but the more we feel, the further off we are, so what is not yet felt can't be shown and what is already desired can't be hidden so farcashization and desire are not distant, it's their principle that can't be seen. It would be a very naive sort of dogmatism to assume that every beautiful girl is an impossible creature to be got or to accept the man as he is and she is always going to embarrass and farcashize him, as if she is an indocile black wild cat, the beautiful girl is not a unique and homogeneous but she is immensely diversified, having as many different schemes and patterns as there are different ways of beauty, so the phenomenons which we find in our certain relationships such as farcashization are not transferable with all people but the attitude of the relationship, therefore the dating of two people is like the contact of two chemical substances, if there is any reaction between them depending on that attitude, both are transformed. Finally there is no relationship between any two partners looks like what we really see, yours doesn't, mine doesn't and people are much more complicated than what we imagine, then their relationships are more perplexing too, so you can't judge any relationship according the actions of the relationship's partners, it is true of every relation.
Omer Mohamed
Wacey had called Etbauer “the ultimate government employee,” a man who had never collected a paycheck in his life that wasn’t from either the state or the Federal government. He had attained his rank due to a particularly bureaucratic method known as ADV or “advanced due to vacancy.” That meant that Etbauer simply put in his time and moved up as others moved out or retired. As state employees either left to take other jobs or start businesses of their own, bureaucrats like Etbauer (who no private sector employer would ever want on the payroll) simply grew in power and seniority like a tumor within the agency, amassing security and building a fine pension.
C.J. Box (Open Season (Joe Pickett #1))