Every dictionary is different. In the Oxford English dictionary, after "concept" n., and "concept" v., comes "conceptacle".
In the New Oxford American dictionary, the next word is "conception."
In both the TWL, (the Scrabble dictionary) and Webster's Second International, the next word is "conceptacle."
The word "germ" would come before the word "germinate" in the dictionary, as words are typically listed in alphabetical order.
No, the word "handy" would come after the word "hand" in a dictionary page as it starts with the letter "h" followed by "a."
In the dictionary, the word 'breath' would come before the word 'breathe.' This is because the dictionary is organized alphabetically.
a dictionary.
in the dictionary
The answer to the riddle "When does Tuesday come before Thursday?" is in a dictionary. In a dictionary, the word "Tuesday" appears before the word "Thursday" due to alphabetical order.
You would look the word up in a dictionary. The dictionary will give you the meaning, as well as other information about a word.
The guide words that would come before and after "curious" in a dictionary would typically be words like "curl" and "curry".
I believe it is a made up word that currently is not an official dictionary listed word.
The guide words on top in a dictionary for the word "strange" would likely be "strand" and "strangle." These are the words that come before and after "strange" in alphabetical order.
You would use the alphabet to look up a word in the dictionary because all of the words are in alphabetical order. Just select the first letter of the word and search for that in the dictionary.
It would depend on the dictionary being used. However, commonly the last word in the "Y" section of a dictionary is "youthquake."