That IS the correct spelling of 'quite'. If you know the first few letters, you can look it up. Use a dictionary next time.
It means not having quite enough money for something.
Quite is a way of rephrasing "rather".I'm not Quite sure...
it means yr not quite nervous
Frantically means that for eg. someone is going quite mad wich is the same as frantically.
Snowfall is quite rare at Myrtle Beach, and it doesn't stick around after it falls.
Yes, myrtle shrubs are most definitely grown in Australia. Australia has the lemon myrtle (Backhausia citriodora) which is native to the continent, as are members of the syzygium, tristania and eugenia families. Also grown here are honey myrtle and crepe myrtle, but it could be that the Australian version of "myrtle shrubs" are quite different genus altogether from those with which other continents are familiar.
There are quite a few meanings of CGPA, I assume from the category this question is in it means Cumulative Grade Point Average
There are quite a few composers in Myrtle Beach, SC. Most of them are small or up-and-coming (myself being one of them). I have had work premiered in the Conway/Myrtle Beach area, Columbia, SC, and one to be premiered in Savannah, GA this Spring. Hope this helps.
After the accident that killed Myrtle, George spends the night sitting in his living room, feeling anxious and restless. He is aware that something is wrong with Myrtle, but he cannot quite figure out what it is. His emotions are a mix of confusion, sorrow, and anger.
No, quite means 'completely' in the context of "I'm quite sure" The definition of 'quite' is: completely, wholly, or entirely: quite the reverse; not quite finished.
not quite-- it is twelve and forty-nine hundredths. A freaky way would be twelve and four point nine tenths.
It means "I am quite..." or "I am fairly..." whatever comes after that. For example, quite happy, quite fat, fairly tired, etc.
"that's exactly correct". Very often "quite" means "almost exactly" but here it means "completely".
I don't quite understand how this applies to plumbing and feel I must point out that it is does not dose but to prostrate means lie down . Generally it is used to mean respectful submission.
The term 'end of the line' means the final outcome or the conclusion. Synonyms are stopping point, wrap-up and closing. It is not quite certain from where the term originated.
That IS the correct spelling of 'quite'. If you know the first few letters, you can look it up. Use a dictionary next time.