UPPERCASE vs GREAT: NOUN
- Alternative spelling of upper case.
- One of the large alphabetic characters used as the first letter in writing or printing proper names and sometimes for emphasis
- 1. The whole; the gross; the mass; wholesale: as, to work by the great.
- A similar division of other organs.
- A division of most pipe organs, usually containing the most powerful ranks of pipes.
- One that is great.
- . A great part; the greater part; the sum and substance.
UPPERCASE vs GREAT: ADJECTIVE
- Relating to capital letters which were kept in the top half of a compositor's type case
- Written in upper case; capital
- Of, printed, or formatted in capital letters.
- Large in quantity or number: : large.
- Of a larger size than other, similar forms.
- Very large in size, extent, or intensity.
- Very good
- (used of persons) standing above others in character or attainment or reputation
- Marked by active interest and enthusiasm
- Uppercase
- Remarkable or out of the ordinary in degree or magnitude or effect
- Of major significance or importance
- Relatively large in size or number or extent; larger than others of its kind
- More than usual
- Remarkable or outstanding in magnitude, degree, or extent.
- Extensive in time or distance.
- Of outstanding significance or importance.
- Chief or principal.
- Superior in quality or character; noble.
- Powerful; influential.
- Eminent; distinguished.
- Very good; first-rate.
- Very skillful.
- Enthusiastic.
- Being one generation removed from the relative specified. Often used in combination.
- Pregnant.
UPPERCASE vs GREAT: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To begin (a word) with an uppercase letter.
- To put (type or text) in uppercase letters.
- N/A
UPPERCASE vs GREAT: ADVERB
- N/A
- Very well.
- Used as an intensive with certain adjectives.
UPPERCASE vs GREAT: OTHER WORD TYPES
- X and Y and Z etc"
- Capitals were kept in the upper half of the type case and so became known as upper-case letters"
- To become great or large; grow large; enlarge.
- To become great with child; become pregnant.
- To make great; aggrandize.
- Unusually or comparatively large in size or extent; of large dimensions; of wide extent or expanse; large; big: as, a great rock, house, farm, lake, distance, view, etc.
- Large in number; numerous: as, a great multitude; a great collection.
- Exceeding or unusual in degree: as, great fear, love, strength, wealth, power.
- Widely extended in time; of long duration; long-continued; long: as, a great delay.
- Of large extent or scope; stately; imposing; magnificent: as, a great entertainment.
- Of large consequence; important; momentous; weighty; impressive.
- Chief; principal; largest or most important: as, the great seal of England; the great toe.
- Holding an eminent or a superlative position in respect to rank, office, power, or mental or moral endowments or acquirements; eminent; distinguished; renowned: as, the great Creator; a great genius, hero, or philosopher; a great impostor; Peter the Great.
- Grand; magnanimous; munificent; noble; aspiring: as, a great soul.
- Expressive of haughtiness or pride; arrogant; big: as, great looks; great words.
- Filled; teeming; pregnant; gravid.
- In an advanced stage of pregnancy
- Excellent
- A person who has achieved distinction and honor in some field
- The corresponding season of the church year, from Easter to Ascension.
- The Black Sea.
- The forty years' division, a. d. 1378-1417, between different parties in the Latin or Roman Catholic Church, which adhered to different popes.
- In a wider sense, a colon or series.
- In music, in the comparative, same as major: as, greater third (a major third), etc.
- In geneal., one degree more remote in ascent or descent: generally joined with its noun by a hyphen, and used alone only for brothers and sisters of lineal ancestors, in other cases before the prefix grand-: as, great-uncle, great-aunt (brother or sister of a grandparent); great-grandfather, great-grandson, great-grandneph-ew.
- Much in use; much used; much affected;
- Hard; difficult.
- Much in action; active; persistent; earnest; zealous: as, a great friend to the poor; a great foe to monopoly.
- . Widely known; notorious.
- Larger than others of its kind
UPPERCASE vs GREAT: RELATED WORDS
- Upper case, Lower case, Capitalised, Shift, Cap, Upper, Capitalized, Capitalization, Capitalisation, Print, Printed, Lowercase, Majuscule, Great, Capital
- Large, Avid, Eager, Enthusiastic, Dandy, Major, Cool, Keen, Nifty, Outstanding, Important, Extraordinary, Neat, Big, Good
UPPERCASE vs GREAT: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Alphabet, Case, Upper case, Lower case, Shift, Cap, Upper, Capitalized, Capitalization, Capitalisation, Print, Printed, Lowercase, Great, Capital
- Large, Avid, Eager, Enthusiastic, Dandy, Major, Cool, Keen, Nifty, Outstanding, Important, Extraordinary, Neat, Big, Good
UPPERCASE vs GREAT: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Uppercase G These worksheets will teach you how to write the cursive letters G through L in their uppercase form.
- This key also changes to indicate the current case you are using: for lowercase, for uppercase, when locked in uppercase.
- While it is possible to use uppercase letters in variable names, conventional C usage reserves uppercase for constant names.
- Consider generating an extra column with text converted to uppercase and converting your query argument to uppercase as well.
- This example has been typed in all uppercase letters, but needs to be formatted properly so that only the first letter is uppercase.
- Prints lowercase characters received from the host computer as their corresponding uppercase equivalents; uppercase characters received from the computer print as uppercase.
- Below you ll find tricks for teaching uppercase cursive letters and uppercase cursive letter formation.
- Be careful not to overuse uppercase or to typeset too many words in uppercase.
- Sectioned type cases held uppercase and lowercase slugs; uppercase forms sat in the upper part.
- The paper title should be in uppercase and lowercase letters, not all uppercase.
- Great hospital to work for, neurology floor could be difficult at times but had great coworkers that were always willing to pitch in.
- He found me a great loan and a great deal.
- So is this great and wide sea, wherein are things creeping innumerable, both small and great beasts.
- So in that respect the audit is a great tool, it gives great direction as to where we should focus.
- Daily Deals to get great prices on great movies every day.
- He was expecting his first great great grandchild.
- We all are great fans of your great personality.
- Patrick Lunt of Hallowell, and many grandchildren, great grandchildren, great, great grandchildren nieces, nephews and friends.
- In great crisis lies great opportunity, and in a down market, short sales offer investors great opportunity for a sizable ROI.
- Great pieces, great prices and great customer service.
UPPERCASE vs GREAT: QUESTIONS
- Should the first character be uppercase or capitalized?
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- How do you learn uppercase&lowercase letters together?
- What is a uppercase and lowercase spinner template?
- Does gnuplot offer uppercase or lowercase functions?
- Does Amazon Redshift support uppercase column names?
- Who is Alexander the Great and why is he called the Great?
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- What happened to Coco Coco's great-great-grandson Miguel?
- Why were the Great Plains once called the Great American desert?
- Who drives Gatsby's car in the Great and the Great?
- What is the child of my great aunt and great uncle?
- When did Mabel the great great great granddaughter live?