
Open English Wordnet
Adjectives
(a)most(superlative of ‘many’ used with count nouns and often preceded by ‘the’) quantifier meaning the greatest in number“who has the most apples?”,
“most people like eggs”,
“most fishes have fins” (a)mostthe superlative of ‘much’ that can be used with mass nouns and is usually preceded by ‘the’; a quantifier meaning the greatest in amount or extent or degree“made the most money he could”,
“what attracts the most attention?”,
“made the most of a bad deal” Adverbs
(r)most, to the highest degreeused to form the superlative, greatest in size or degree“the king cobra is the most dangerous snake” (r)about, almost, most, nearly, near, nigh, virtually, well-nigh(of actions or states) slightly short of or not quite accomplished; all but“the job is (just) about done”,
“the baby was almost asleep when the alarm sounded”,
“we're almost finished”,
“the car all but ran her down”,
“he nearly fainted”,
“talked for nigh onto 2 hours”,
“the recording is well-nigh perfect”,
“virtually all the parties signed the contract”,
“I was near exhausted by the run”,
“most everyone agrees” (r)very, really, real, rattling, most, precious, preciouslyused to give emphasis“she was very gifted”,
“he played very well”,
“a really enjoyable evening”,
“I'm real sorry about it”,
“a rattling good yarn”,
“a most welcome relief”,
“there is precious little time left”