- infinitively
- adverb see infinitive I
New Collegiate Dictionary. 2001.
New Collegiate Dictionary. 2001.
infinitively — in·fin·i·tive·ly … English syllables
infinitively — adverb see infinitive I … Useful english dictionary
infinitive — infinitively, adv. /in fin i tiv/, Gram. n. 1. a verb form found in many languages that functions as a noun or is used with auxiliary verbs, and that names the action or state without specifying the subject, as French venir to come, Latin esse to … Universalium
infinitive — I. adjective Etymology: Middle English infinityf, from Late Latin infinitivus, from Latin infinitus Date: 15th century formed with the infinitive • infinitively adverb II. noun Date: 1530 a verb form normally identical in English with the first… … New Collegiate Dictionary
Nanopolymers — The word nano is derived from the Greek word for “dwarf”. It is the prefix for units of 10 9. In a nutshell, nanoscience is the study of the extremely tiny. Nanoscience is concerned with the study of the unique properties of matter at its nano… … Wikipedia
Polymer nanocomposite — Polymer nanoscience is the study and application of nanoscience to polymer nanoparticle matrices, where nanoparticles are those with at least one dimension of less than 100 nm. Contents 1 Nanopolymers 2 Bio hybrid polymer nanofibers 2.1 Bio… … Wikipedia
infinitive — /ɪnˈfɪnətɪv / (say in finuhtiv) Grammar –noun 1. Also, bare infinitive. (in English) the simple form of the verb (come, take, eat) used after certain other verbs (I didn t eat), or this simple form preceded by to (the marked infinit …