heaps
11heaps — UK [hiːps] / US [hɪps] adverb British informal much I feel heaps better today …
12HEAPS, ABRAHAM ALBERT — (1885–1954), Canadian Labour leader, politician. Heaps was born in Leeds, England and attended school until 13, when he went to work to help support his family. He apprenticed as an upholsterer, and opened his own workshop and managed a large… …
13heaps better — heaps ˈbetter, ˈmore, ˈolder, etc. idiom (BrE, informal) a lot better, etc • Help yourself there s heaps more. • He looks heaps better than when I last saw him …
14heaps more — heaps ˈbetter, ˈmore, ˈolder, etc. idiom (BrE, informal) a lot better, etc • Help yourself there s heaps more. • He looks heaps better than when I last saw him …
15heaps older — heaps ˈbetter, ˈmore, ˈolder, etc. idiom (BrE, informal) a lot better, etc • Help yourself there s heaps more. • He looks heaps better than when I last saw him …
16heaps of something — or a heap of something informal a lot of something It s going to be heaps of fun …
17heaps of something — a heap of something informal phrase a lot of something It’s going to be heaps of fun. Thesaurus: large quantities or amountssynonym large amounts or quantities of a specific kindhyponym Main entry …
18Heaps' law — In linguistics, Heaps law is an empirical law which describes the portion of a vocabulary which is represented by an instance document (or set of instance documents) consisting of words chosen from the vocabulary. This can be formulated as: V… …
19heaps — hɪËp n. pile, mound; special area of memory which is used to store important resources (Computers) v. pile up; fill full …
20heaps of- — piles of, a large amount of, tons of …