4 results for: one by one
one
Audio Help [wuhn] Pronunciation Key
Audio Help [wuhn] Pronunciation Key –adjective
–noun
–pronoun
—Idioms
| 1. | being or amounting to a single unit or individual or entire thing, item, or object rather than two or more; a single: one woman; one nation; one piece of cake. |
| 2. | being a person, thing, or individual instance or member of a number, kind, group, or category indicated: one member of the party. |
| 3. | existing, acting, or considered as a single unit, entity, or individual. |
| 4. | of the same or having a single kind, nature, or condition: We belong to one team; We are of one resolve. |
| 5. | noting some indefinite day or time in the future: You will see him one day. |
| 6. | a certain (often used in naming a person otherwise unknown or undescribed): One John Smith was chosen. |
| 7. | being a particular, unique, or only individual, item, or unit: I'm looking for the one adviser I can trust. |
| 8. | noting some indefinite day or time in the past: We all had dinner together one evening last week. |
| 9. | of no consequence as to the character, outcome, etc.; the same: It's all one to me whether they go or not. |
| 10. | the first and lowest whole number, being a cardinal number; unity. |
| 11. | a symbol of this number, as 1 or I. |
| 12. | a single person or thing: If only problems would come one at a time! |
| 13. | a die face or a domino face having one pip. |
| 14. | a one-dollar bill: to change a five-dollar bill for five ones. |
| 15. | (initial capital letter ) Neoplatonism. the ultimate reality, seen as a central source of being by whose emanations all entities, spiritual and corporeal, have their existence, the corporeal ones containing the fewest of the emanations. |
| 16. | a person or thing of a number or kind indicated or understood: one of the Elizabethan poets. |
| 17. | (in certain pronominal combinations) a person unless definitely specified otherwise: every one. |
| 18. | (with a defining clause or other qualifying words) a person or a personified being or agency: the evil one; the one I love. |
| 19. | any person indefinitely; anyone: as good as one would desire. |
| 20. | Chiefly British. (used as a substitute for the pronoun I): Mother had been ailing for many months, and one should have realized it. |
| 21. | a person of the speaker's kind; such as the speaker himself or herself: to press one's own claims. |
| 22. | something or someone of the kind just mentioned: The portraits are fine ones. Your teachers this semester seem to be good ones. |
| 23. | something available or referred to, esp. in the immediate area: Here, take one—they're delicious. The bar is open, so have one on me! |
| 24. | at one,
|
| 25. | one and all, everyone: They came, one and all, to welcome him home. |
| 26. | one by one, singly and successively: One by one the children married and moved away. |
| 27. | one for the road. road (def. 9). |
[Origin: bef. 900; ME oon, OE ān; c. D een, G ein, Goth ains, L ūnus (OL oinos); akin to Gk oíné ace on a die
]
] —Usage note One as an indefinite pronoun meaning “any person indefinitely, anyone” is more formal than you, which is also used as an indefinite pronoun with the same sense: One (or you) should avoid misconceptions. One (or you) can correct this fault in three ways. When the construction requires that the pronoun be repeated, either one or he or he or she is used; he or he or she is the more common in the United States: Wherever one looks, he (or he or she) finds evidence of pollution. In speech or informal writing, a form of they sometimes occurs: Can one read this without having their emotions stirred?
In constructions of the type one of those who (or that or which), the antecedent of who is considered to be the plural noun or pronoun, correctly followed by a plural verb: He is one of those people who work for the government. Yet the feeling that one is the antecedent is so strong that a singular verb is commonly found in all types of writing: one of those people who works for the government. When one is preceded by only in such a construction, the singular verb is always used: the only one of her sons who visits her in the hospital.
The substitution of one for I, a typically British use, is usually regarded as an affectation in the United States. See also he1, they.
In constructions of the type one of those who (or that or which), the antecedent of who is considered to be the plural noun or pronoun, correctly followed by a plural verb: He is one of those people who work for the government. Yet the feeling that one is the antecedent is so strong that a singular verb is commonly found in all types of writing: one of those people who works for the government. When one is preceded by only in such a construction, the singular verb is always used: the only one of her sons who visits her in the hospital.
The substitution of one for I, a typically British use, is usually regarded as an affectation in the United States. See also he1, they.
| Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1) Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2006. |
one by one
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| one
Audio Help (wŭn) Pronunciation Key
adj.
n.
pron.
[Middle English on, from Old English ān; see oi-no- in Indo-European roots.] Word History: Why do we pronounce one (wŭn) and once (wŭns) while other words derived from one, like only, alone, and atone, are pronounced with a long o? Over time, stressed vowels commonly become diphthongs, as when Latin bona became buona in Italian and buena in Spanish. A similar diphthongization of one and once began in the late Middle Ages in the west of England and in Wales and is first recorded around 1400. The vowel sound underwent a series of changes, such that the word's pronunciation went from (ōn) to (ōōōn), with two syllables, to (wōn) to (wōōn) to (wŏŏn) and finally to (wŭn). In southwest England, this diphthongization happened to other words beginning with the long o sound, such as oats, pronounced there now as (wŭts). Only in one and once did this diphthongal pronunciation gain widespread usage. Usage Note: When constructions headed by one appear as the subject of a sentence or relative clause, there may be a question as to whether the verb should be singular or plural. Such a construction is exemplified in the sentence One of every ten rotors was found defective. Although the plural were is sometimes used in such sentences, an earlier survey found that the singular was preferred by 92 percent of the Usage Panel. · Constructions such as one of those people who pose a different problem. Most grammarians would argue that who should be followed by a plural verb in these sentences, as in He is one of those people who just don't take "no" for an answer. Their thinking is that the relative pronoun who refers to the plural noun people, not to one. They would extend the rule to constructions with inanimate nouns, as in The sports car turned out to be one of the most successful products that were ever manufactured in this country. However, constructions of this sort are often used with a singular verb even by the best writers. In an earlier survey, 42 percent of the Usage Panel accepted the use of the singular verb in such constructions. Note also that when the phrase containing one is introduced by the definite article, the verb in the relative clause must be singular: He is the only one of the students who has (not have) already taken Latin. · Constructions using one or more or one or two always take a plural verb: One or more cars were parked in front of the house each day this week. One or two students from our department have won prizes. Note that when followed by a fraction, one ordinarily takes a plural verb: One and a half years have passed since I last saw her. The fraction rule has an exception in that amounts are sometimes treated as singular entities: One and a half cups is enough sugar. Note also that the plural rule does not apply to these one-plus-a-fraction constructions that are introduced by the indefinite article. These are always singular: A year and a half has passed since I last saw her. See Usage Note at he1. |
| The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2006 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. |
| one by one | |
adverb | |
| 1. | in single file; "the prisoners came out one by one" |
| 2. | one piece at a time; "she sold the plates by the piece" [syn: by the piece] |
| 3. | apart from others; "taken individually, the rooms were, in fact, square"; "the fine points are treated singly" [syn: individually] |
| WordNet® 3.0, © 2006 by Princeton University. |
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