LONG vs ELONGATE: NOUN
- A comparatively long time
- A long time.
- Trousers extending to the feet or ankles.
- A garment size for a tall person.
- A long syllable, vowel, or consonant.
- N/A
LONG vs ELONGATE: ADJECTIVE
- Of relatively great duration.
- Made up of many members or items.
- Extending beyond an average or standard.
- Extending or landing beyond a given boundary, limit, or goal.
- Tediously protracted; lengthy.
- Concerned with distant issues; far-reaching.
- Involving substantial chance; risky.
- Having an abundance or excess of.
- Having a holding of a commodity or security in expectation of a rise in price.
- Having a comparatively great duration. Used of a vowel or consonant.
- Relating to or being the English speech sounds (ā, ē, ī, ō, oo͞) that are tense vowels or diphthongs.
- Of a specified linear extent or duration.
- Having the greater length of two or the greatest length of several.
- Being of relatively great duration. Used of a syllable in quantitative prosody.
- Of speech sounds (especially vowels) of relatively long duration (as e.g. the English vowel sounds in `bate', `beat', `bite', `boat', `boot')
- Holding securities or commodities in expectation of a rise in prices
- (of memory) having greater than average range
- Involving substantial risk
- Used of syllables that are unaccented or of relatively long duration
- Of relatively great height
- Having or being more than normal or necessary:long on brains havingorbeingmorethannormalorn
- Planning prudently for the future
- Extending or traveling a relatively great distance.
- Having relatively great height; tall.
- Primarily spatial sense; of relatively great or greater than average spatial extension or extension as specified
- Primarily temporal sense; being or indicating a relatively great or greater than average duration or passage of time or a duration as specified
- Slender.
- Lengthened, extended.
- Drawn out at length; elongated.
- Having more length than width; slender.
- Made longer; extended.
- Of a leaf shape; long and narrow
- Having notably more length than width; being long and slender
LONG vs ELONGATE: VERB
- Desire strongly or persistently
- Make long or longer by pulling and stretching
- To make long or longer by pulling and stretching; to make elongated.
LONG vs ELONGATE: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To have an earnest, heartfelt desire, especially for something beyond reach.
- N/A
LONG vs ELONGATE: TRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To lengthen; to extend; to stretch.
LONG vs ELONGATE: ADVERB
- At a point of time distant from that referred to.
- For or throughout a specified period.
- At or to a considerable distance; far.
- During or for an extended period of time.
- Into or in a long position, as of a commodity market.
- For an extended time or at a distant time
- For an extended distance
- N/A
LONG vs ELONGATE: OTHER WORD TYPES
- To have a yearning or wistful desire; feel a strong wish or craving; hanker: followed by for or after before the object of desire, or by an infinitive.
- To long for; desire.
- Same as along: in the phrase long of, sometimes written ‘long of.
- To belong.
- To a great extent in space; with much length: as, a line long drawn out.
- Far; to or at a distance, or an indicated distance.
- To a great extent in time; for an extended period; with prolonged duration: as, he has been long dead; it happened long ago, long before, or long afterward; a long-continued drought; a long-forgotten matter.
- For a length of time; for the period of: used with terms of limitation: as, how long shall you remain? as long as I can; all day long.
- An abbreviation of longitude.
- See -ling.
- Good at remembering
- Having or being more than normal or necessary
- (of speech sounds or syllables) of relatively long duration
- Primarily temporal sense
- Primarily spatial sense
- (idiom) (not long for) Unlikely to remain for much more time in.
- (idiom) (no longer) Not now as formerly.
- (idiom) (long in the tooth) Growing old.
- (idiom) (long ago) A time well before the present.
- (idiom) (the long and the short of it) The substance or gist.
- (idiom) (long ago) At a time or during a period well before the present.
- (idiom) (before long) Soon.
- (idiom) (any longer) For more time.
- Being long and slender
- Lengthened; extended or produced; attenuated; specifically, in zoology and botany, disproportionately or comparatively long or extended: as, a worm has an elongate body; a proboscis is an elongate snout; elongate antennæ are about as long as the body of an insect; elongate elytra extend beyond the abdomen; an elongate flower-stem.
- To make long or longer; lengthen; extend, stretch, or draw out in length: as, to elongate a rope by splicing.
- To remove further off.
- To recede; move to a greater distance; particularly, to recede apparently from the sun, as a planet in its orbit.
- (transitive; intransitive verb) To make or grow longer.
LONG vs ELONGATE: RELATED WORDS
- Extendible, Elongate, Endless, Interminable, Lengthened, Lifelong, Longstanding, Extended, Far, Yearlong, Protracted, Longish, Lasting, Prolonged, Lengthy
- Lay, Lying, Lie, Grow, Extended, Stretched, Oblong, Recline, Extend, Lengthen, Unsubdivided, Simple, Stretch, Long, Linear
LONG vs ELONGATE: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Extendible, Elongate, Endless, Interminable, Lengthened, Lifelong, Longstanding, Extended, Far, Yearlong, Protracted, Longish, Lasting, Prolonged, Lengthy
- Lay, Lying, Lie, Grow, Extended, Stretched, Oblong, Recline, Extend, Lengthen, Unsubdivided, Simple, Stretch, Long, Linear
LONG vs ELONGATE: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- How long can we keep Cheshire Bridge weird?
- Loan: How long would such an appeal take?
- How long have you lived at this address?
- All the day long this is my song Praising my savior All the day long this is my song my.
- Long this is my song Praising my savior All the day long blessed assurance worship circle lyrics is my this.
- With a long term Term Deposit, you have control over how long the term is and when you will receive your interest payments.
- Get the latest Long Island News from the Long Island Press.
- They may be eligible to accrue long service leave credits under the Long Service Leave Act.
- And if there was a God in heaven, the sisters would be wearing matching orange jumpsuits for a long, long time.
- And before long, Fargo took a long leap and launched himself from shore.
- They can shrink, elongate, or become brittle and thus deteriorate.
- There are far more barriers that elongate the process.
- GLEBA firm, with small, open irregular to elongate locules.
- If symbol is not indicated, its pattern cannot elongate.
- Elongate hemlock scale, Fiorinia externa, Nuculaspis tsugae, natural enemies.
- Unfortunately, half of all American marriages elongate wedgme.
- Make letters more abstract, shorten or elongate them.
- Fluke bodies tend to be oval and elongate.
- Body not elongate, snakelike, or possessing bony plates.
- Rat fibroblasts and neurons elongate along aligned fibres.
LONG vs ELONGATE: QUESTIONS
- How long do chlorofluoromethanes stay in the environment?
- How long is AIT for transportation management coordinator?
- How long does unemployment insurance last in California?
- How long do aftershocks last after Christchurch earthquake?
- How long does trichomoniasis last without treatment?
- How long should bleeding after misoprostol persist?
- How long does cheesecake last without refrigeration?
- How long do synchronized swimming competitions last?
- Is Lake Chargoggagoggmanchauggagoggchaubunagungamaugg really that long?
- How long is our God marching on (how long not long)?
- Can Apple elongate the battery on the iPhone 8 and 8 Plus?
- What are the characteristics of the elongate larvae?
- Does Orthodontic extrusion elongate the Crown of a fractured tooth?
- How does DNA polymerase epsilon elongate the leading strand?
- What causes the eyeballs to elongate causing myopia?
- Why dideoxyribonucleotides do not elongate the DNA chain?