Yahoo Malaysia Web Search

Search results

  1. Dictionary
    I've never heard that piece before.
  2. We use before as a subordinating conjunction. We commonly use before with the past simple tense. It suggests that the second event happened soon after the first one. The before clause, which indicates the second action, can be at the end or at the beginning of the sentence: …

  3. 1 Answer. Sorted by: 1. It was common in ME and EModE to introduce a clause serving as the object of a preposition with the complementizer that. This use dropped away in ModE. You may find examples in OED I, s.v. That conj., definition I.1.c.. It's toward the bottom of the final column of the second page at the link. Share. Improve this answer.

  4. Definition of before preposition in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  5. "before that" is correct and can be used in written English. It can be used to refer to a time before some other event or action. For example: "I had done my homework for the day, before that I went for a walk.".

  6. You use before when you are talking about time. For example, if something happened the day before a particular date or event, it happened during the previous day.

  7. Adverb or adjective their arrival was completely expected because a messenger had gone before Preposition We arrived shortly before six o'clock. He left just before sunrise. I've never seen her so happy before now.

  8. Before, by, till, until. If you have to do something before a certain point in time, then when that point arrives, the action must already be completed: I need to have the letter before Friday. (Friday is too late. I need it in advance of Friday.)