not+enough

  • 61Not Your Kind of People — Not Your Kind of People …

    Википедия

  • 62not anything like as good — not anything like as good, much, etc. idiom used to emphasize that sth is not as good, not enough, etc. • The book wasn t anything like as good as her first one. Main entry: ↑anythingidiom …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 63not anything like as much — not anything like as good, much, etc. idiom used to emphasize that sth is not as good, not enough, etc. • The book wasn t anything like as good as her first one. Main entry: ↑anythingidiom …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 64enough — e|nough1 W1S1 [ıˈnʌf] adv [always after a verb, adjective, or adverb] 1.) to the degree that is necessary or wanted ▪ Are the carrots cooked enough? ▪ He just hadn t thought enough about the possible consequences. ▪ You can go to school when you… …

    Dictionary of contemporary English

  • 65enough — 1 /I nVf/ adverb 1 to the necessary degree: Her sentence was light because the judge said she had suffered enough already. | Are the carrots cooked enough? 2 tall/kind/fast etc enough as tall, kind, fast etc as is necessary: I didn t bring a big… …

    Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • 66not proven — adjective see not proved * * * not ˈproven idiom (in Scottish law) a ↑verdict (= decision) at a trial that there is not enough evidence to show that sb is guilty or innocent, and that they must be set free Main entry: ↑proven …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 67not only — if it were not enough that ; not just, also …

    English contemporary dictionary

  • 68not go far — 1) used for saying that you cannot buy very much with a particular amount of money Twenty pounds doesn t go very far these days. 2) used for saying that a supply of something is not enough A few sandwiches won t go far between all of us. One… …

    English dictionary

  • 69Not Quite Dead Enough —   …

    Wikipedia

  • 70enough — enough, sufficient, sufficiently 1. Enough functions as both an adjective and an adverb, whereas sufficient requires modification as sufficiently. As an adjective (or modifier), enough will normally serve, but sufficient is more idiomatic when a… …

    Modern English usage