none
41none — (no n ) s. f. 1° Terme d antiquité romaine. La quatrième partie du jour, qui commençait à la fin de la neuvième heure, ou, selon notre manière de compter, à trois heures après midi. 2° Terme de liturgie catholique. Celle des sept heures… …
42none — see a bad excuse is better than none there’s none so blind as those who will not see none but the brave deserve the fair there’s none so deaf as those who will not hear jack of all trades and master of none …
43none — determiner, n., pronoun none of (none of them) USAGE NOTE: The use of the preposition of is necessary when a pronoun follows. When a noun follows, the use of of the limits the meaning; no replaces none when the meaning is not limited we saw none… …
44none — The widely held belief that none must always be singular is a myth. Since Fowler, Bernstein, Howard, Gowers, Partridge, the Evanses, the Morrises, Follett, The Oxford English Dictionary, the American Heritage, Random House, and Websters New… …
45None — Cette page d’homonymie répertorie les différents sujets et articles partageant un même nom. Sur les autres projets Wikimedia : « None », sur le Wiktionnaire (dictionnaire universel) None, une ville d Italie None, une prière de la… …
46none — pronoun 1) none of the fish are unusual Syn: not one, not a (single) one Ant: all 2) none of this concerns me Syn: no part, not a bit, not any Ant …
47None — Original name in latin None Name in other language None, none State code IT Continent/City Europe/Rome longitude 44.93314 latitude 7.54012 altitude 249 Population 7761 Date 2012 02 15 …
48none — See: HALF A LOAF IS BETTER THAN NONE, HAVE NONE OF …
49none — See: HALF A LOAF IS BETTER THAN NONE, HAVE NONE OF …
50none — I. pronoun, singular or plural in construction Etymology: Middle English, from Old English nān, from ne not + ān one more at no, one Date: before 12th century 1. not any 2. not one ; nobody 3. not any such thing or person 4. no part …