No more
from
The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
More \More\, n.
1. A greater quantity, amount, or number; that which exceeds
or surpasses in any way what it is compared with.
[1913 Webster]
And the children of Israel did so, and gathered,
some more, some less. --Ex. xvi. 17.
[1913 Webster]
2. That which is in addition; something other and further; an
additional or greater amount.
[1913 Webster]
They that would have more and more can never have
enough. --L'Estrange.
[1913 Webster]
O! That pang where more than madness lies. --Byron.
[1913 Webster]
{Any more}.
(a) Anything or something additional or further; as, I do
not need any more.
(b) Adverbially: Further; beyond a certain time; as, do
not think any more about it.
{No more}, not anything more; nothing in addition.
{The more and less}, the high and low. [Obs.] --Shak. "All
cried, both less and more." --Chaucer.
[1913 Webster]
from
Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0
90 Moby Thesaurus words for "no more":
ago, all gone, annihilated, antiquated, antique, asleep,
asleep in Jesus, at rest, away, bereft of life, blown over,
breathless, by, bygone, bypast, called home, carrion, croaked,
dated, dead, dead and buried, dead and gone, death-struck,
deceased, defunct, demised, departed, departed this life,
destitute of life, done for, down the drain, elapsed, exanimate,
expired, extinct, fallen, finished, food for worms, forgotten,
gone, gone away, gone glimmering, gone to glory, gone west,
gone-by, had it, has-been, inanimate, irrecoverable, kaput, kaputt,
lapsed, late, late lamented, launched into eternity, lifeless,
lost, lost to sight, lost to view, martyred, missing, nonexistent,
obsolete, out of sight, over, passe, passed, passed away,
passed on, past, past and gone, perished, pushing up daisies,
released, reposing, resting easy, run out, sainted, sleeping,
smitten with death, still, stillborn, taken away, taken off,
vanished, with the Lord, with the saints, without life,
without vital functions, wound up
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