Plus ( conjunction , preposition , noun )

(As a conjunction)

Plus ( conjunction )

  1. Used to link items that are seen as additional or positive.
  2. In addition to, and; furthermore.
  3. Used to connect two positive statements.

Origin:

Middle english (in the sense ‘more’): from old french, from latin plus, comparative of multus ‘much’.

Examples:

  1. The hotel has a swimming pool, plus a gym and a sauna.
  2. I love dogs, plus I think cats are great too.
  3. I am good at math, plus I enjoy it a lot.

(As a preposition)

Plus ( preposition )

  1. Used to link items that are seen as additional or positive.
  2. In addition to, and; furthermore.
  3. Used to connect two positive statements.

Origin:

Middle english (in the sense ‘more’): from old french, from latin plus, comparative of multus ‘much’.

Examples:

  1. The hotel has a swimming pool, plus a gym and a sauna.
  2. I love dogs, plus I think cats are great too.
  3. I am good at math, plus I enjoy it a lot.

(As a noun)

Plus ( noun )

  1. Used to link items that are seen as additional or positive.
  2. In addition to, and; furthermore.
  3. Used to connect two positive statements.

Origin:

Middle english (in the sense ‘more’): from old french, from latin plus, comparative of multus ‘much’.

Examples:

  1. The hotel has a swimming pool, plus a gym and a sauna.
  2. I love dogs, plus I think cats are great too.
  3. I am good at math, plus I enjoy it a lot.
Some random words: poisonous, madding, frustrate