Antonym: or. Meaning: [nɔː; nə] conj.1. (used in negative phrases, esp. after neither, to introduce the second member in a series, or any subsequent member): Neither he nor I will be there. They won't wait for you, nor for me, nor for anybody. 2. (used to continue the force of a negative, as not, no, never, etc., occurring in a preceding clause): He left and I never saw him again, nor did I regret it. 3. (used after an affirmative clause, or as a continuative, in the sense of and not): They are happy, nor need we worry. 4. Older Use. than. 5. Archaic. (used without a preceding neither, the negative force of which is understood): He nor I was there. 6. Archaic. (used instead of neither as correlative to a following nor): Nor he nor I was there..
Random good picture Not show
(241) Nor could he disregard the Salic Law which forbade the accession to the throne of a woman.
(242) He was not a music lover, nor was he particularly attracted by any cultural activity.
(243) This he freely admitted, although, even so, neither he nor Mama would ever reveal what his real name was.
(244) Government lawyers said the case was neither merited nor admissible.
(245) Nevertheless, neither the Chronicle nor the Historia Brittonum provides an acceptable alternative to the Bedan chronology.
(246) These features of the gospels are neither simple history nor redundant embroidery.
(247) Math may be defined as the subject in which we never know what we are talking about, nor whether what we are saying is true. Bertrand Russell
(248) You are neither the first nor the last to chase success but you can be the one to accomplish all that you desire if you put your heart and soul in it and give it everything you've got. Dr Roopleen
(249) Here, visual acuity is not so sharp, nor is our ability to judge distances so good.
(250) Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted.
(251) Nor was there any evidence that the inspector had failed to take account of the likely costs of compliance.
(252) Nor have they any legal commitment to managing the monstrous forests they created for their absentee landlords.
(252) Sentencedict.com try its best to collect and make good sentences.
(253) Neither the life of anarchy nor the life enslaved by tyrants, no, worship neither. Strike the balance all in all and god will give you power. Aeschylus
(254) Nor was Britain the only colonial power to incorporate existing native rulers into a system of colonial administration.
(255) Neil couldn't imagine a more accommodating child nor, for most of the time, a more contented one.
(256) It is a tacit acknowledgement that neither office nor a peerage awaits them.
(257) Nor does it mean that the project acquisitions were not used.
(258) Nor is it absolutely certain that that experience differs in any fundamental way from that of past eras.
(259) As winter approached, Napoleon was unable to advance further, nor could he persuade the Tsar to negotiate.
(260) As you simplify your life, the laws of the universe will be simpler; solitude will not be solitude, poverty will not be poverty, nor weakness weakness. Henry David Thoreau
(261) Nor does this case involve any accredited representative of a foreign state in this country.
(262) This structure can neither impose law upon its members nor force one of them to adopt a policy with which it disagrees.
(263) Happiness can be found neither in ourselves nor in external things, but in God and in ourselves as united to him. Blaise Pascal
(264) Nor is CRT technology standing still.
(265) Nor could he applaud the equivalent in literature.
(266) However, thiskind of research model has neither been recognized nor been paidenough attention by Chinese criminology.
(267) It was at present a place perfectly accordant with man's nature -- neither ghastly, hateful, nor ugly.
(268) There was about him nothing of the adventurer, nor any suggestion of the field of battle.
(269) Nor should central banks stimulate to avoid recession at any cost.
(270) A mule has neither pride of ancestry nor hope of posterity.