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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
elsewhere
adverb
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ VERB
describe
▪ Some of these benefits are described elsewhere in this Journal.
▪ The site of disease and demographic details have been described elsewhere.
▪ The underlying physical principle and the shock wave machine have been described elsewhere.
▪ Briefly, the perfused preparation consisted of pancreas with a small remnant of duodenum according to the method as described elsewhere.
▪ The method for reconstruction is described elsewhere.
▪ Rules for Mortars are described elsewhere in this volume.
▪ Special rules for Steam Tanks are described elsewhere in this volume.
discuss
▪ Tail rotor trim is variable and depends on many factors which are discussed elsewhere.
▪ There are exceptions to this, which have been discussed elsewhere.
▪ The reasons for this have been discussed elsewhere.
find
▪ Such a complex timber to stone sequence is found elsewhere in Ilchester.
▪ Some of this material can be found elsewhere in a growing number of online resources related to trade.
▪ It attempted to identify the components of learning with a clarity not found elsewhere.
▪ A list of these deterrents to progress is to be found elsewhere in this volume.
▪ But then I started to wonder whether the explanation was not to be found elsewhere.
▪ Once a reader is tuned in on these thrusts in his sociology, they easily can be found elsewhere as well.
▪ Much of the stock consists of books that might be found elsewhere - though rarely in such a comprehensive collection.
go
▪ If the students do not value their learning experience, they can go elsewhere.
▪ There is a very strong wish in this corner of the world to go elsewhere, to migrate collectively to another present.
▪ The ferry arrived on Saturday evening and we instantly agreed to stay on the boat and to go elsewhere.
▪ Occasionally, even its member institutions will go elsewhere for a restoration project.
▪ If those patients start to go elsewhere the hospital will loose funding.
▪ When consumers accustomed to choices confront public institutions that offer standardized services, they increasingly go elsewhere.
▪ If you want welfare, go elsewhere.
happen
▪ He was particularly keen to establish contacts between the college and what was happening elsewhere in post-war Britain.
▪ Now this is opening them up to the world and what happens elsewhere is part of their life.
▪ The idea that it is happening elsewhere prevalent in our lives.
▪ D id it also happen elsewhere?
▪ It is happening elsewhere to my knowledge.
▪ A chief characteristic of isolationism is not caring very much about what happens elsewhere.
▪ Tomorrow the same thing can happen elsewhere.
lie
▪ Some, because their interests lie elsewhere, may be barely able to read, and their writing may be rudimentary.
▪ But the true benefit for Microsoft may lie elsewhere.
▪ However, the real foundations of prosperity lay elsewhere.
▪ Then they learn survival lies elsewhere.
▪ Is this too much to ask in the current economic climate when priorities may all to easily lie elsewhere?
▪ Nor should they be; unless they are in the therapy business, their expertise lies elsewhere.
▪ It is much easier to bury a problem than to consider whether our moral obligation lies elsewhere.
▪ But for various reasons a specifically town-planning view of the roads question was slow to develop; emphasis seemed to lie elsewhere.
live
▪ For example, the social security system sets conditions which can make it hard for families to support family members who live elsewhere.
▪ Evictions did not stop the dealers who lived elsewhere, of course.
▪ It deteriorated very much on Uncle John's death, but by then I had long left to live elsewhere.
▪ Another 35 work in Virginia, but live elsewhere.
▪ BBy region, residents of the West were more likely to be victims of Bviolent crime than those living elsewhere.
▪ He lives elsewhere, probably surrounded by luxury, but he often reappears unexpectedly.
▪ They went to live elsewhere in Easterhouse in very poor accommodation.
▪ Roughly four-fifths of the world's people live elsewhere.
look
▪ She was as surprised as anyone when he looked elsewhere.
▪ Any reader looking for an affirmative sociology centered in success and joy rather than conservation and moderation would have to look elsewhere.
▪ We need to look elsewhere, therefore, to understand how public sector auditing differs from private sector auditing.
▪ We encourage organizations to give this approach a try before looking elsewhere.
▪ Whatever the reason we have to look elsewhere for evidence of the origins of the invertebrates.
▪ Without Abdur-Rahim, who averaged 21. 1 points per game, the Bears will have to look elsewhere for their scoring.
▪ I wandered on a yard or two, pretending to look elsewhere.
move
▪ As we saw in Chapter 5, your freedom to move elsewhere may be limited in a number of ways.
▪ When this happens, she thinks she will move elsewhere.
▪ A company that consistently recruits from outside induces its staff to move elsewhere - this is expensive in terms of lost experience.
▪ Colin Harbury moved elsewhere as Professor of Economics.
▪ Many regulars are, however, loath to move elsewhere, for Central is central.
▪ It was, in fact, completed only shortly before the College was moved elsewhere, the palazzo becoming a government building.
▪ If the local market is saturated, it may be wise to move elsewhere to develop a new market.
▪ Brian felt emotionally attached to the unit and staff and felt abandoned and alienated by being moved elsewhere.
use
▪ While not as watertight as a Section 50 agreement, planning conditions have been used elsewhere to control phasing.
▪ Those texts still are widely used elsewhere as new curricula and books are written and debated.
▪ These are listed at one chosen or model heading and may also be used elsewhere within a category. 4.
▪ If successful, it could be used elsewhere.
▪ It is always possible to do that, and to use elsewhere the money saved.
▪ Make sure the abbreviation used is not a proper word which you might use elsewhere in the document.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
Elsewhere in the region, conditions are significantly better.
▪ He'll work as a freelance consultant, unless he finds a better job elsewhere.
▪ In North America and Europe, cats are companions for many people. Elsewhere, they are not regarded as pets.
▪ Make your home difficult to get into, and burglars will go elsewhere.
▪ Prices continue to rise in Moscow and elsewhere in the country.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Alterations to one element of the Marketing Mix can have repercussions within each category, or elsewhere within the Marketing Mix.
▪ At least some of the drop in wholesale prices has started showing up elsewhere on the West Coast.
▪ Firms in those countries become the world leaders and begin to export as rising incomes spur demand elsewhere.
▪ Given that the workplace by itself provides so little as a basis for solidarity, we have to look elsewhere.
▪ I was glad to hear the accent, for it reminded me of my exciting days in Northern Ireland, recounted elsewhere.
▪ Its members can do things considered unacceptable elsewhere in our culture.
▪ Not that my food supply seems worse than elsewhere, but less and less does it seem better.
▪ Such politically engaged postmodernism is rarer in Britain than elsewhere.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Elsewhere

Elsewhere \Else"where`\, adv.

  1. In any other place; as, these trees are not to be found elsewhere.

  2. In some other place; in other places, indefinitely; as, it is reported in town and elsewhere.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
elsewhere

"in another place, in other places," c.1400, elswher, from Old English elles hwær (see else + where). Related: Elsewhither (Old English elleshwider.

Wiktionary
elsewhere

adv. In or at some other place or places; away. n. A place other than here; somewhere else.

WordNet
elsewhere

adv. in or to another place; "he went elsewhere"; "look elsewhere for the answer"

Wikipedia
Elsewhere

Elsewhere may refer to:

Elsewhere (anthology)

Elsewhere: An Anthology of Incredible Places is the third short story anthology published by the Canberra Speculative Fiction Guild. Printed in 2003 and edited by Michael Barry, it contains stories from several Australian speculative fiction authors.

Elsewhere (Zevin novel)

Elsewhere is a 2005 young adult magical realist novel by Gabrielle Zevin.

Elsewhere (film)

Elsewhere is an Austrian documentary in 12 episodes which describes life in twelve very different locations. During the year 2000 Nikolaus Geyrhalter and his teams travelled to different places each month, looking for places untouched by the millennium hysteria.

Elsewhere (Blatty novel)

Elsewhere (2009) is a novel by William Peter Blatty, released on May 15, 2009 through Cemetery Dance Publications. It was originally published as a novella in 1999 in Al Sarrantonio's 999: New Stories Of Horror And Suspense anthology.

Elsewhere is studied in the 2008 publication American Exorcist: Critical Essays on William Peter Blatty. The story follows a group of people who visit a supposedly haunted house. When other secrets appear, the group tries to find out what else the house has that is secret.

Elsewhere (Scott Matthews album)

Elsewhere is the second album of British singer/songwriter Scott Matthews, released on May 25, 2009, more than three years after Passing Stranger. The album was released on Island after the label signed Matthews when re-issuing his debut. The album contains the single "Fractured", with the video available with the iTunes download of the album.

Elsewhere (Joe Morris album)

Elsewhere is an album by American jazz guitarist Joe Morris which was recorded in 1996 and released on Homestead. The Joe Morris Ensemble features pianist Matthew Shipp's regular trio with bassist William Parker and drummer Whit Dickey. Morris and Shipp played together once with violinist Mat Maneri in Boston four or five years before.

Elsewhere (EP)

Elsewhere is the debut EP by Australian band Elsewhere. It was recorded at 4EB Studios, Kangaroo Point QLD on 8 December 2001. It was released independently in January 2002. Band member Kate Miller-Heidke later performed the song "Nothing Will Be Missed" on her DVD, "Live In San Francisco".

Elsewhere (band)

Elsewhere is a band from Brisbane, Australia. They formed in 2000, & released a self-titled EP in 2002, before breaking up in 2003. Lead singer Kate Miller-Heidke later went on to have a successful career in Australia.

Usage examples of "elsewhere".

As these several abnormal conditions and diseases will be treated of elsewhere in this volume, we omit their further consideration here.

Greedy Senators, who saw a way to make extra money on the side if a friendly Adjutor could quietly shave a few thousand out of a budget and funnel the funds elsewhere?

Was, as appears elsewhere, a well-conditioned tradesman of Surrey, England, who was both an Adventurer and a MAY-FLOWER Pilgrim, and Martin and himself appear to have been the only ones who enjoyed that distinction.

In these cases, presided over by a judge who knows his work, the rules of evidence are strictly observed, and you will learn more in six months of practical advocacy than in ten years elsewhere.

All the other attractions of Agios Georgios could be found in a score of similar villages, in Crete or elsewhere.

Fortunately there is little changed here: my old Albergo, -- ruinous with earthquake -- is down and done with -- but few novelties are observable -- except the regrettable one that the silk industry has been transported elsewhere -- to Cornuda and other places nearer the main railway.

With John interested only in Yoko and his own music, and with George Martin often busy elsewhere or on holiday, Paul had inevitably taken charge of the album, at different times alienating both George Harrison and Ringo.

Amalgam Creatures exist elsewhere, therefore giant Amalgams exist here?

So inventing by the light of inner consciousness alone, he worked up tiny doses of the grey ambergris into mutton fat, coloured it faintly pink with cochineal insects he caught on the prickly pear hedges, added a little crude borax as a preservative, and so produced a cosmetic that was no better and little worse than the thousand other nostrums of its kind in daily use elsewhere.

Very pleasing specimens of ancient Peruvian feather work are recovered from graves at Ancon and elsewhere, and the method of inserting the feathers is illustrated in the Sixth Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology.

The two last are said elsewhere to be directed against two sets of thinkers called the Eternalists and the Annihilationists, who held respectively the everlasting-life-heresy and the let-us-eat-and-drink-for-tomorrow-we-die-heresy.

If I bad-mouthed Big Jim elsewhere then, please, let it lie, because right now.

Rather than seek similar employment elsewhere, the young Basho, who had long been interested in poetry, abandoned his samurai status and, after studying for a while in Kyoto, moved to the military capital of Edo.

In alcoves beflowered girls offered synthetic love to wheezing old men, and elsewhere others lay stupefied by dream-powders.

But she was the worst befooled mortal in the world when she turned elsewhere for support.