All 11 Uses
moreover
in
A Room of One's Own
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- Moreover, I recollected, as I put this plan into execution, it is in this famous library that the manuscript of Thackeray's ESMOND is also preserved.†
Chpt 1 *
- Moreover, it was amusing enough to watch the congregation assembling, coming in and going out again, busying themselves at the door of the chapel like bees at the mouth of a hive.†
Chpt 1
- Moreover, it is equally useless to ask what might have happened if Mrs Seton and her mother and her mother before her had amassed great wealth and laid it under the foundations of college and library, because, in the first place, to earn money was impossible for them, and in the second, had it been possible, the law denied them the right to possess what money they earned.†
Chpt 1
- Moreover, in a hundred years, I thought, reaching my own doorstep, women will have ceased to be the protected sex.†
Chpt 2
- Moreover, it is all very well for you, who have got yourselves to college and enjoy sitting-rooms—or is it only bed-sitting-rooms?†
Chpt 3
- Moreover, I thought, looking at the four famous names, what had George Eliot in common with Emily Brontë?†
Chpt 4
- Moreover, a book is not made of sentences laid end to end, but of sentences built, if an image helps, into arcades or domes.†
Chpt 4
- 'Highly developed'—'infinitely intricate'—such are undeniably terms of praise, and to praise one's own sex is always suspect, often silly; moreover, in this case, how could one justify it?†
Chpt 5
- Rossetti had a small private income; and, moreover, he painted.†
Chpt 6
- Moreover, if you consider any great figure of the past, like Sappho, like the Lady Murasaki, like Emily Brontë, you will find that she is an inheritor as well as an originator, and has come into existence because women have come to have the habit of writing naturally; so that even as a prelude to poetry such activity on your part would be invaluable.†
Chpt 6
- Moreover, the economists are telling us that Mrs Seton has had too many children.†
Chpt 6
Definitions:
-
(1)
(moreover) in addition to what has just been said
- (2) (meaning too rare to warrant focus)