None
51NONE — s. f. T. de Liturgie cathol. Celle des sept heures canoniales qui se chante ou qui se récite après sexte. Où en êtes vous de votre bréviaire ? J en suis à none. Après none, on dit vêpres …
52none — adverb a) To no extent, in no way. I felt none the worse for my recent illness. b) Not at all. Now dont you worry none …
53None — No|ne 〈f. 19〉 1. 〈kath. Kirche〉 Gebetsstunde um drei Uhr nachmittags, zur neunten Tagesstunde 2. 〈Mus.〉 2.1 neunter Ton der diaton. Tonleiter 2.2 Intervall von neun Tonstufen 3. 〈Pl.〉 Nonen nach dem altröm. Kalender der fünfte Monatstag, im März …
54none — See: half a loaf is better than none, have none of …
55none — pron 1. no one, not one, not a one, nary a one, never a one, not a soul, nobody on earth. 2. not any, not a bit, not a thing, Inf. not a blessed thing; not a hint, not a trace, not a whit, not a speck, not an iota, not a jot, not an ounce, Inf.… …
56none — [OE] Etymologically, none is simply ‘not one’. It was formed in the Old English period from the negative particle ne and ān, ancestor of modern English one. It was originally both a pronoun and an adjective, but in the latter role it has been… …
57None — nona ит. [но/на] None нем. [но/нэ] нона …
58none — Although none can always take a singular verb, there is no rule recognized by any authority on English grammar that it cannot equally well take a plural one …
59none — no|ne sb., n, r, rne (MUSIK et toneinterval), i sms. none , fx noneakkord …
60none — A ohe mea, a ohe, a ole. ♦ None whatsoever, ole loa …