YourTango: Study Finds Boomers Would Rather Spend All Their Money Than Leave Anything For Their Kids
Study Finds Boomers Would Rather Spend All Their Money Than Leave Anything For Their Kids
MSN: Kids would 'rather spend time with family than game alone this Xmas'
Kids would 'rather spend time with family than game alone this Xmas'
MSN: Labour would rather spend billions on benefits and migrants hotels than this ONE liberty
Labour would rather spend billions on benefits and migrants hotels than this ONE liberty
British kids would rather play charades with their grandparents than be holed up in their room gaming alone this Christmas, a study suggests. Bucking the screen-obsessed stereotype, a survey of kids ...
When do we use rather in English? "Rather" is a versatile word in the English language, often used to convey preference or degree. A) We use rather as an adverb of degree One of the primary uses of " rather " is as an adverb of degree. This means it's used to modify or emphasise the intensity or degree of an adjective or adverb. Modifying an adjective
Rather definition: More readily; preferably. Origin of Rather From Middle English rather, rether, from Old English hraþor (“sooner, earlier, more quickly" ), comparative of hraþe (“hastily, quickly, promptly, readily, immediately, soon, at once, directly" ), equivalent to rathe +"Ž -er. More at rathe. From Wiktionary Middle English from Old English hrathor comparative of hræthe quickly ...
Labour would rather splurge billions on hotels for illegal migrants and benefit handouts than protect jury trials, Robert Jenrick has declared. The Shadow Justice Secretary said Sir Keir Starmer and ...