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Better   /bˈɛtər/   Listen
Better

adjective
1.
(comparative of 'good') superior to another (of the same class or set or kind) in excellence or quality or desirability or suitability; more highly skilled than another.  "A better coat" , "A better type of car" , "A suit with a better fit" , "A better chance of success" , "Produced a better mousetrap" , "She's better in math than in history"
2.
(comparative of 'good') changed for the better in health or fitness.  "I feel better"
3.
(comparative and superlative of 'well') wiser or more advantageous and hence advisable.  Synonym: best.  "The White House thought it best not to respond"
4.
More than half.
adverb
1.
Comparative of 'well'; in a better or more excellent manner or more advantageously or attractively or to a greater degree etc..  "A deed better left undone" , "Better suited to the job"
2.
From a position of superiority or authority.  Synonym: best.  "I know better."
verb
(past & past part. bettered; pres. part. bettering)
1.
Surpass in excellence.  Synonym: break.  "Break a record"
2.
To make better.  Synonyms: ameliorate, amend, improve, meliorate.
3.
Get better.  Synonyms: ameliorate, improve, meliorate.
noun
1.
Something superior in quality or condition or effect.
2.
Someone who bets.  Synonyms: bettor, punter, wagerer.
3.
A superior person having claim to precedence.
4.
The superior one of two alternatives.



Good

adjective
(compar. better; superl. best)
1.
Having desirable or positive qualities especially those suitable for a thing specified.  "A good report card" , "When she was good she was very very good" , "A good knife is one good for cutting" , "This stump will make a good picnic table" , "A good check" , "A good joke" , "A good exterior paint" , "A good secretary" , "A good dress for the office"
2.
Having the normally expected amount.  Synonym: full.  "Gives good measure" , "A good mile from here"
3.
Morally admirable.
4.
Deserving of esteem and respect.  Synonyms: estimable, honorable, respectable.  "Ruined the family's good name"
5.
Promoting or enhancing well-being.  Synonym: beneficial.  "The beneficial effects of a temperate climate" , "The experience was good for her"
6.
Agreeable or pleasing.  "Good manners"
7.
Of moral excellence.  Synonyms: just, upright.  "A just cause" , "An upright and respectable man"
8.
Having or showing knowledge and skill and aptitude.  Synonyms: adept, expert, practiced, proficient, skilful, skillful.  "An adept juggler" , "An expert job" , "A good mechanic" , "A practiced marksman" , "A proficient engineer" , "A lesser-known but no less skillful composer" , "The effect was achieved by skillful retouching"
9.
Thorough.  "Gave the house a good cleaning"
10.
With or in a close or intimate relationship.  Synonyms: dear, near.  "My sisters and brothers are near and dear"
11.
Financially sound.  Synonyms: dependable, safe, secure.  "A secure investment"
12.
Most suitable or right for a particular purpose.  Synonyms: right, ripe.  "The right time to act" , "The time is ripe for great sociological changes"
13.
Resulting favorably.  Synonym: well.  "It is good that you stayed" , "It is well that no one saw you" , "All's well that ends well"
14.
Exerting force or influence.  Synonyms: effective, in effect, in force.  "A warranty good for two years" , "The law is already in effect (or in force)"
15.
Capable of pleasing.
16.
Appealing to the mind.  Synonym: serious.  "A serious book"
17.
In excellent physical condition.  Synonym: sound.  "I still have one good leg" , "A sound mind in a sound body"
18.
Tending to promote physical well-being; beneficial to health.  Synonym: salutary.  "A good night's sleep" , "The salutary influence of pure air"
19.
Not forged.  Synonym: honest.
20.
Not left to spoil.  Synonyms: undecomposed, unspoiled, unspoilt.
21.
Generally admired.



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"Better" Quotes from Famous Books



... the witness, "if you want to make an ass of yourself you'd better shut up. What's that got ...
— The Master of the Shell • Talbot Baines Reed

... "Better still, better still," interrupted the newcomer, grasping his hand again; "you'll be broader, more progressive—'the heir of all the ages,' and so forth. I was denied such privileges in my youth. ...
— The Wizard's Daughter and Other Stories • Margaret Collier Graham

... a certain defeat for the county restored the earl to his original intention of giving a mild support to Hogarth, who certainly would be a better man than Fortescue. There was the usual amount of personal abuse levelled at the banker's clerk—neither his father nor his mother was spared—there were caricatures of him in mean lodgings and shabby raiment, doing things for himself, which he recollected doing, ...
— Mr. Hogarth's Will • Catherine Helen Spence

... wife, not meaning the proverb. Her eye had swept the whole array of vehicles and had found them all empty, save one, in which she detected the blamelessly coated back of Mr. Arbuton. But I ought perhaps to explain Mrs. Ellison's motives better than they can be made to appear in her conduct. She cared nothing for Mr. Arbuton; and she had no logical wish to see Kitty in love with him. But here were two young people thrown somewhat romantically together; Mrs. Ellison was a born match-maker, and to have refrained from ...
— A Chance Acquaintance • W. D. Howells

... entrusted with the power, or whether they ought to have a power which their personal interest leads to the abuse of. I am sure no candid man will hesitate about the answer; and it may also safely be left with ingenuous men to say whether the misconduct which we sometimes see in the press had not better be borne with, than to run the risk of confiding the power of correction to men who will be constantly urged by their own feelings to destroy its usefulness. How long can it be desirable to have periodical elections for the purpose of judging of the ...
— American Eloquence, Volume I. (of 4) - Studies In American Political History (1896) • Various


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