adverb COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES a better/greater/deeper understanding ▪ All of this will lead to a better understanding of … …Įnglish-Russian Lingvistica'98 dictionary RINGS - Trading arenas located on the floor of an exchange in which traders execute orders.Lord's Supper Bentinck William Henry Cavendish Lord Lord Byron Cange Charles du Fresne Lord du Lord Chamberlain's Men Churchill … Event in men's gymnastics in which a pair of rubber-coated metal rings suspended from a ceiling or crossbar are … LORD - noun COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS ■ ADJECTIVE good ▪ Even Protestants - and the good Lord knows how mistaken they are ….noun COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES drunk as a lord ( also drunk as a skunk ) (= very drunk … LORD - (~s) Frequency: The word is one of the 1500 most common words in English.In Britain, a lord …Ĭollins COBUILD Advanced Learner's English Dictionary LORD - ( lords) Frequency: The word is one of the 1500 most common words in English.a) a title of God or Jesus Christ, used when praying: Thank you, … Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English lord 1 S3 W2 /lɔːd $ lɔːrd/ BrE AmE noun [ Language: Old English Origin: hlaford, from … Oxford Advanced Learner's English Dictionary LORD - / lɔːd NAmE lɔːrd/ noun, verb ■ noun 1.
LORD - in Great Britain, a general title for a prince or sovereign or for a feudal superior (especially a feudal tenant ….RINGS - also called Still Rings, or Stationary Rings, gymnastic apparatus consisting of two small circles that are suspended by straps from ….↘( Lord ) (in the UK) a title given formally … LORD - ■ noun a man of noble rank or high office.RINGS - plural of ring present third singular of ring.Webster's New International English Dictionary
ˈlȯ(ə)rd, -ȯ(ə)d, sometimes chiefly Brit ˈləd esp in exclamations & in the form of address “My Lord” used by …