often with
11Often — Of ten, a. Frequent; common; repeated. [R.] Thine often infirmities. 1 Tim. v. 23. [1913 Webster] And weary thee with often welcomes. Beau. & Fl. [1913 Webster] …
12often — In current English this is more usually pronounced with the t silent. The comparative forms oftener and oftenest are permissible, although more often and most often are more commonly used …
13with — [with, with] prep. [ME < OE, orig., against, in opposition to, contr. < or akin to wither, against < IE * witero (< base * wi , asunder, separate + compar. suffix) > Ger wider, against] 1. in opposition to or competition facing;… …
14often met with — index common (customary) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …
15with — O.E. wið against, opposite, toward, a shortened form related to wiðer, from P.Gmc. *withro against (Cf. O.S. withar against, O.N. viðr against, with, toward, at, M.Du., Du. weder, Du. weer again, Goth. wiþra against, opposite ), from PIE …
16with your eyes shut — with your eyes shut/closed/ phrase used for saying that it is easy to do something I could do his job with my eyes shut. Thesaurus: easy to do and to be easysynonym Main entry: eye * * * with your eyes shut …
17with your eyes closed — with your eyes shut/closed/ phrase used for saying that it is easy to do something I could do his job with my eyes shut. Thesaurus: easy to do and to be easysynonym Main entry: eye * * * with your eyes closed …
18with a capital [A/B/C etc.] — 1. something that you say in order to emphasize a particular quality. You re trouble with a capital T, you are! 2. if you talk about a subject with a capital A/B/C etc., you mean the most formal and often limited understanding of that subject.… …
19with a capital A — with a capital [A/B/C etc.] 1. something that you say in order to emphasize a particular quality. You re trouble with a capital T, you are! 2. if you talk about a subject with a capital A/B/C etc., you mean the most formal and often limited… …
20with a capital B — with a capital [A/B/C etc.] 1. something that you say in order to emphasize a particular quality. You re trouble with a capital T, you are! 2. if you talk about a subject with a capital A/B/C etc., you mean the most formal and often limited… …