Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. Definition of 'nothing but' nothing but. phrase B2. You use nothing but in front of a noun, an infinitive without 'to', or an '-ing' form to mean 'only'. All that money brought nothing but sadness and misery and tragedy. It did nothing but make us ridiculous. They care for nothing but fighting.

    • Nothing If Not

      At the very least; certainly.... Click for English...

    • Only

      14 meanings: 1. → See the only 2. (of a child) having no...

    • Infinitive

      Grammar a form of the verb not inflected for grammatical...

    • Vanity

      7 meanings: 1. the state or quality of being vain; excessive...

  3. "Nothing but" means "only": Nothing but the best. Only the best. "Anything but" means any one thing except whatever follows but: Don't make me go to school. Anything but that. Don't make me go to school. You can make me do anything else, but don't make me go to school. "Everything but" means everything excepting whatever follows but:

  4. Meaning of nothing but something in English. nothing but something. collocation. Add to word list. only; no more than: This car has been nothing but trouble - it's always breaking down! His story was dismissed by all who heard it as nothing but a pack of lies. See. nothing. but. Fewer examples.

  5. “But” in the expression “nothing but” meansexcept”, i.e. “nothing but” is just a more emphatic way of saying “nothing except”, “only”; for example We could see nothing but fog.

  6. Definitions of 'nothing but' You use nothing but in front of a noun, an infinitive without `to,' or an `-ing' form to mean `only.' [...] More. Synonyms of 'nothing but' • just, only, simply, merely [...] More. Examples of 'nothing but' in a sentence.

  7. 1. To the exclusion of all else. Tom talks about nothing but sports whenever I see him. My toddler is so fussy. At the moment, he'll eat nothing but cheese and drink nothing but apple juice. 2. A large quantity of or exclusively (the thing that has just been inquired about). Typically used hyperbolically. A: "Do you have any extra pens?"

  8. nothing but. From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English nothing but only She’d had nothing but bad luck. → nothing Examples from the Corpus nothing but • They saw nothing but a dim grayness, or was it blackness? • His death was nothing but an absurd, ludicrous accident.