Antonyms for over and over
Grammar : Adj, adv |
Spell : oh-ver |
Phonetic Transcription : ˈoʊ vər |
Definition of over and over
Origin :- Old English ofer "beyond, above, upon, in, across, past; on high," from Proto-Germanic *uberi (cf. Old Saxon obar, Old Frisian over, Old Norse yfir, Old High German ubar, German über, Gothic ufar "over, above"), from PIE *uper (see super-). As an adjective from Old English uffera. As an adverb from late Old English. Sense of "finished" is attested from late 14c. Meaning "recovered from" is from 1929. In radio communication, used to indicate the speaker has finished speaking (1926). Adjective phrase over-the-counter is attested from 1875, originally of stocks and shares.
- As in again and again : adj often
- As in much : adv greatly, a lot
- As in often : adv frequently
- As in again : adv another time; repeated
- As in frequently : adv commonly, repeatedly
Synonyms for over and over
- a great deal
- a number of times
- afresh
- again and again
- anew
- anon
- as a rule
- at regular intervals
- at short intervals
- at times
- bis
- by and by
- by ordinary
- come again
- considerably
- continuously
- customarily
- decidedly
- eminently
- encore
- every now and then
- exceedingly
- exceptionally
- extremely
- frequently
- freshly
- generally
- habitually
- highly
- hugely
- in many instances
- in quick succession
- indeed
- intermittently
- many a time
- many times
- much
- newly
- not infrequently
- not seldom
- notably
- oft
- often
- oftentimes
- ofttimes
- once again
- once more
- one more time
- ordinarily
- over
- over and over
- periodically
- recurrently
- regularly
- reiteratively
- repeatedly
- spasmodically
- successively
- surpassingly
- thick and fast
- time after time
- time and again
- time and time again
- usually
- very
- very often
Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019