there is no compound word in English ending with zebra. I looked in the dictionary.
Hmm well why don't you look in a dictionary and see? =P
No, the word vicious is not an adverb.The word vicious is an adjective.The adverb form of this word is viciously.Here is a dictionary entry for the word "vicious" (click here).
These is no meaning found for the word "kooora" in the English language or the dictionary. Perhaps the word "Kooora" is misspelled or just not found on the Internet.
Stallion
there is no compound word in English ending with zebra. I looked in the dictionary.
It means "often". "Often" is actually a lengthened form of "oft"Oft is a poetic way of saying "often."Shakespeare's text is written in early modern English, not shakespeare talk. But I digress, oft means "often.""Oft" is the same word as "often". You will notice that words with -en at the end will sometimes have a form without the -en ending. Thus "hap" and "happen", "ope" and "open". Many of these appear to be adjectives formed from the past forms of words or from nouns, as "wooden" from "wood", "hempen" from "hemp", "shotten" from "shot".In the case of words like "often", the ending has survived after the reason for it has ceased to be.
there is no compound word in English ending with zebra. I looked in the dictionary.
The longest word ending with "tion" in the English dictionary is "antidisestablishmentarianism." It's a mouthful, I know. But hey, at least now you can impress your friends with your knowledge of ridiculously long words.
oft is a poetic word
Oft is not a shortened word. Often is a lengthened word. The original word is oft and the form often did not appear until about a century before Shakespeare's day. They are, of course, the same word and mean the same thing.
By dictionary meaning there isn't one. There is one word that is close which is 'Credo' Meaning (from dictionary) 'A statement of the beliefs or aims that guide someone's actions.'
Word definitions can be found in any dictionary. A dictionary found in most households or in a library lists words alphabetically. The word will be listed as legitimate and the -ly ending on the word makes it an adverb.
The only one I can think if is mission. Check out your dictionary.
The possessive form of the word "dictionary" is "dictionary's."
Yes, the word 'oft', but it is an archaic word or only used in 'literary' works.e.g."Oft expectation fails, and most oft thereWhere most it promises; and oft it hitsWhere hope is coldest, and despair most fits."[Shakespeare: All's Well That Ends Well, Scene II, Act I. Words spoken by Helena.]
Div is in the Concise Oxford Dictionary (fifth edition 1971) as an evil spirit in Persian mythology.