[ UK /ˌɛvəmˈɔː/ ]
[ US /ˈɛvɝˌmɔɹ/ ]
ADVERB
  1. at any future time; in the future
    lead a blameless life evermore
  2. for a limitless time
    no one can live forever
    brightly beams our Father's mercy from his lighthouse evermore
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How To Use evermore In A Sentence

  • In all things, even till this instant, (being the utmost period of my life) I have evermore found my Fathers love most effectuall to me; but now it appeareth farre greater, then at any time heretofore: and therefore from my mouth, thou must deliver him the latest thankes that ever I shall give him, for sending me such an honourable present. The Decameron
  • Blest are they that dwell within thy house, they praise thy name evermore. Times, Sunday Times
  • Thus the word "nevermore," a gloomy, terrible word, comes into his mind, and he proceeds to brood over it. Outlines of English and American Literature : an Introduction to the Chief Writers of England and America, to the Books They Wrote, and to the Times in Which They Lived
  • Poe had been a musty relic, someone she was forced to read in high school, nothing more than " nevermore. IN A STRANGE CITY
  • It is there to deliver us, for an evening and evermore.
  • Also in that contree, and in othere also, men fynden longe apples to selle, in hire cesoun: and men clepen hem apples of paradys; and thei ben righte swete and of gode savour. 74 And thoghe zee kutte hem in never so many gobettes or parties, overthwart or end longes, evermore zee schulle fynden in the myddes the figure of the Holy Cros of oure The Voyages and Travels of Sir John Mandeville
  • This kills off the sale price, so either it doesn't sell, and the owner resents the house forevermore, or it gets sold cheaply and treated as something cheap.
  • Shaykh said to him, ‘O Janshah, take the keys of the castle and solace thyself with exploring all its apartments and viewing whatever be therein, but as regards such a room, beware and again beware of opening its door; and if thou gainsay me and open it and enter there, through nevermore shalt thou know fair fortune.’ The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • Imagination, -- all from which, when it was all his own, he had turned half weary and impatient, and termed the exaggerations of a visionary romance, now that the world had lost them evermore, he interpreted aright as truths. My Novel — Volume 12
  • No way but suicide king and down the alley roared the car clitter clattering up the motorways and through towards evermore. Final Resting Place of The Pen
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