English edit

Etymology edit

Inherited from Middle English furtherover. By surface analysis, further +‎ over.

Pronunciation edit

  • (US) IPA(key): /ˈfɝ.ðɚ.oʊvɚ/
  • Hyphenation: fur‧ther‧o‧ver

Adverb edit

furtherover (not comparable)

  1. (conjunctive) In addition; moreover; furthermore; additionally.
    • 1916, Sir Henry Craik, 1st Baronet, editor, English Prose:
      And furtherover they shall have default of all manner delices; []
    • 2004 August, Carol Griffiths, David Jordan, Strategies for Success in IELTS, page 2:
      Furtherover, we have all also no doubt struggled to balance the one-track demands of getting students though the exam versus spending the time that is required to develop the underlying skills needed to avoid the kinds of linguistic monstrosities quoted in the first sentence of this paragraph.
    • 2007 October 5, “Phosphorylation of Smac by JNK3 attenuates its interaction with XIAP”, in Byoung Duck Park, Young Mi Ham, Hyun Ji Jeong, Seung Ju Cho, Young Tae Je, Kyu Dong Yoo, Seung-Ki Lee, editors, PubMed:
      Furtherover, JNK3-mediated phosphorylation of Smac markedly attenuates the interaction between Smac and XIAP, []