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next
[ nekst ]
adjective
- immediately following in time, order, importance, etc.:
the next day;
the next person in line.
- nearest or adjacent in place or position:
the next room.
- nearest in relationship or kinship.
adverb
- in the place, time, importance, etc., nearest or immediately following:
We're going to London next.
This is my next oldest daughter.
- on the first occasion to follow:
when next we meet.
preposition
- adjacent to; nearest:
It's in the closet next the blackboard.
next
/ nɛkst /
adjective
- immediately following
the next patient to be examined
do it next week
- immediately adjoining
the next room
- closest to in degree
the next-best thing
the tallest boy next to James
- the next but onethe one after the next
adverb
- at a time or on an occasion immediately to follow
next, he started to unscrew the telephone receiver
the patient to be examined next
- next to
- adjacent to; at or on one side of
the house next to ours
- following in degree
next to your mother, who do you love most?
- almost
next to impossible
preposition
- archaic.next to
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of next1
Idioms and Phrases
- get next to (someone), Informal. to get into the favor or good graces of; become a good friend of.
- next door to,
- in an adjacent house, apartment, office, etc.; neighboring.
- in a position of proximity; near to:
They are next door to poverty.
- next to,
- adjacent to:
He sat next to his sister.
- almost; nearly:
next to impossible.
- aside from:
Next to cake, ice cream is my favorite dessert.
More idioms and phrases containing next
- cleanliness is next to godliness
Example Sentences
Njoku said the next step for abortion funds in the wake of the Amendment 4 results is to gain more support for the next time a similar vote comes up, and that requires a deeper understanding of why some voters cast ballots for Trump as president and in favor of Amendment 4.
“A lot of money was spent on political campaigns and ballot initiatives and now we are in a reality where for the next four years, all we can hope is for things not to get worse,” Dingus said.
So if the midterm elections are an improvement over the most recent one, you can return to America after the next two years.
You can cruise around the world for the next four years, if your bank account can handle it.
The MP also said he regularly read "heart-breaking posts" on local forums from parents in "utter despair" begging for baby food donations to tide them over until the next pay day.
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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