able <span class="searchmatch">to</span> win" <span class="searchmatch">or</span> "I know I would <span class="searchmatch">be</span> able <span class="searchmatch">to</span> win", whereas the forms using <span class="searchmatch">to</span> <span class="searchmatch">be</span> able <span class="searchmatch">to</span> avoid this ambiguity. (have ability <span class="searchmatch">to</span>): know how <span class="searchmatch">to</span> <span class="searchmatch">be</span> able <span class="searchmatch">to</span> count...
towards”) <span class="searchmatch">be</span> in (“<span class="searchmatch">to</span> <span class="searchmatch">be</span> at home <span class="searchmatch">or</span> at work”) <span class="searchmatch">be</span> in on (“<span class="searchmatch">to</span> <span class="searchmatch">be</span> involved in”) <span class="searchmatch">be</span> like <span class="searchmatch">be</span> <span class="searchmatch">not</span> on (“<span class="searchmatch">to</span> <span class="searchmatch">be</span> unacceptable”) <span class="searchmatch">be</span> off (“<span class="searchmatch">to</span> <span class="searchmatch">be</span> <span class="searchmatch">not</span> fresh, of food; <span class="searchmatch">to</span> leave...
<span class="searchmatch">to</span> you whether <span class="searchmatch">to</span> get the blue one <span class="searchmatch">or</span> the red one. It's up <span class="searchmatch">to</span> the prosecution <span class="searchmatch">to</span> prove that the defendant is guilty. Doing, involved in. <span class="searchmatch">to</span> <span class="searchmatch">be</span> up <span class="searchmatch">to</span> to...
gonna (<span class="searchmatch">be</span>) going <span class="searchmatch">to</span> Expresses the prospective aspect relative <span class="searchmatch">to</span> a given time frame: something that will happen, <span class="searchmatch">or</span> is intended, at the time, <span class="searchmatch">to</span> happen...
<span class="searchmatch">Not</span> <span class="searchmatch">to</span> <span class="searchmatch">be</span> confused with overtly. From over + -ly (adverbial suffix). overly (<span class="searchmatch">not</span> comparable) (sometimes proscribed) <span class="searchmatch">To</span> an excessive degree. Synonyms:...
bi- (“<span class="searchmatch">be</span>-”), West Frisian <span class="searchmatch">be</span>- (“<span class="searchmatch">be</span>-”), Dutch <span class="searchmatch">be</span>- (“<span class="searchmatch">be</span>-”), German Low German <span class="searchmatch">be</span>- (“<span class="searchmatch">be</span>-”), German <span class="searchmatch">be</span>- (“<span class="searchmatch">be</span>-”), Danish <span class="searchmatch">be</span>- (“<span class="searchmatch">be</span>-”), Swedish <span class="searchmatch">be</span>- (“<span class="searchmatch">be</span>-”). More...
all it's cracked up <span class="searchmatch">to</span> <span class="searchmatch">be</span> (usually negative, typically related <span class="searchmatch">to</span> a negative modifier) (idiomatic) As good as claims <span class="searchmatch">or</span> reputation would suggest. This...
<span class="searchmatch">Not</span> <span class="searchmatch">to</span> <span class="searchmatch">be</span> confused with कि. From Prakrit किअउं (kiaüṃ) and Sanskrit कृतं (kṛtaṃ) (perfect participle neuter of कृ (kṛ, “<span class="searchmatch">to</span> do”)). (Delhi) IPA(key): /kiː/...
thịt <span class="searchmatch">bê</span> ― veal bò <span class="searchmatch">bê</span> • (𠶎) (onomatopoeia) The cry of a calf <span class="searchmatch">bê</span> <span class="searchmatch">to</span> carry with both hands (colloquial) <span class="searchmatch">to</span> interlard Borrowed from French <span class="searchmatch">bé</span>. <span class="searchmatch">bê</span> The name...
lot <span class="searchmatch">to</span> <span class="searchmatch">be</span> said something <span class="searchmatch">to</span> <span class="searchmatch">be</span> said much <span class="searchmatch">to</span> <span class="searchmatch">be</span> said (for) Used <span class="searchmatch">to</span> assert the defensibility <span class="searchmatch">or</span> advisability of what follows. There is much <span class="searchmatch">to</span> <span class="searchmatch">be</span> said...