Well there's quite a few: ruination, crash, wreck, breakdown, downfall, etc.
Another word is but
In the sentence "The little old lady walks quite slowly", the word "quite" is an adverb used to describe the adverb "slowly".Adverbs can tell the degree of another adverb. The usual adverbs include not, very, quite, somewhat, too, most, and almost.
another word for very large
what is another word for included
"Quite."
No, the word 'quite' is not a noun.The word 'quite' is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb.Example: It was quite chilly this morning. (the adverb 'quite' modifies the adjective 'chilly')Some people use the word 'quite' as an interjections.Example: It was quite chilly this morning. Quite!
quieten
Quite nearly
"Shiner" is a another word for black eye, like "You have quite a shiner there!" instead of "You have quite a black eye there!"
Another word could be shy, quiet, close-mouthed, and mute.
Another word would be drenched, coated or smothered.
The fancy word is "eructation." There's also "belch", if you don't want to be quite so erudite.
One synonym could be "delicate" (another could be flimsy).
When put in comparison to my friends I am rather quite small Another context would be The comparison between Bill and Jill was quite unfair
There cannot be a plural form of a word that is not a noun. Quite is an additive word, such as "quite beautiful" or "quite harmless". It is grammatically incorrect to make it plural, though I don't know in what case you would have to do so.
In statistics, the name for that is "outlier". Another possible word is "anomaly".