(by someone else)
21in someone else's shoes — See: IN ONE S SHOES …
22be in someone else's shoes — {v. phr.} To be in someone else s situation. * /Fred has had so much trouble recently that we ought to be grateful we re not in his shoes./ …
23be in someone else's shoes — {v. phr.} To be in someone else s situation. * /Fred has had so much trouble recently that we ought to be grateful we re not in his shoes./ …
24I Sleep Much Better In Someone Else's Bed (song) — I Sleep Much Better In Someone Else s Bed was one ofthe two new songs on Billy Ocean s Greatest Hits album in 1989and featured Will Smith (then known as The Fresh Prince).It was released as a single and it s music video was filmedin either New… …
25be\ in\ someone\ else's\ shoes — v. phr. To be in someone else s situation. Fred has had so much trouble recently that we ought to be grateful we re not in his shoes …
26something can't hold a candle to someone else — (someone/something) can t hold a candle to (someone/something else) someone or something is not as good as someone or something else. For Walter, basketball and football can t hold a candle to baseball. Usage notes: sometimes used in the form… …
27SOMEONE ELSE — …
28else — [ els ] adverb *** Else can be used in the following ways: after a pronoun such as something, nothing, anyone, or everyone : He married someone else. Is there anything else you wanted? after the adverbs somewhere, anywhere, everywhere, and… …
29else, else's — Else is an adjective meaning other or different or more, as in the statement She wanted something else. Else can also be an adverb (Walk carefully on the ice or else you will slip), but it appears most often in compound pronouns such as somebody… …
30else — 1. The usual possessive forms are anybody else s, someone else s, etc., and not (for example) anybody s else, although this was used until the mid 19c: • They look to me like someone else s, to be frank Penelope Lively, 1987 • We would like to… …