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Definition of Over here
1. Adverb. In a specified area or place. "You shouldn't be up here"
Definition of Over here
1. Adverb. in this place ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Lexicographical Neighbors of Over Here
Literary usage of Over here
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Dansk-norsk-engelsk Ordbog by Johannes Magnussen (1902)
"Her|over [adv] over here; hereat, hereon. -overfor [adv] opposite, on the other
... -ovre [adv] here, over here, on this side, -paa [adv] hereon, here upon, ..."
2. Annual Report by Illinois Farmers' Institute (1908)
"If I strike the "A" over here the "A" over there will vibrate. ... over here I
have got A, B ,C, D, E, F, G. I want to find out what is over there. ..."
3. Publications by English Dialect Society (1850)
"sent over here, under Lauzun." See Note 57, pp. 233-234, and Note 220, passim.
" His Lordship," adds Harris, " was tried there," that is in France, ..."
4. South Eastern Reporter by West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals, West Publishing Company, South Carolina Supreme Court (1922)
"Earl Meadow, prosecuting witness, for the state, testified that the defendant
said to him: "Come over here. I want you to §ee if you can identify this horse ..."
5. Life and Letters of Edwin Lawrence Godkin by Edwin Lawrence Godkin (1907)
"Weed has been denouncing you over here for saying Seward wanted to escape from
the Southern imbroglio by a war with England. I was not present, ..."
6. Kino's Historical Memoir of Pimería Alta: A Contemporary Account of the by Eusebio Francisco Kino (1919)
"... as I did, over here, with the sole relief and comfort of the hope that, availing
myself of the licenses which Father Juan Maria de Salvatierra had just ..."
7. The Aristocrats: Being the Impressions of the Lady Helen Pole During Her by Gertrude Franklin Horn Atherton (1901)
"He is so different—everything over here is so different from anything I have ever
known. (I don't idealize him. I wonder if that is fatal ? ..."
8. The Revolutionary Diplomatic Correspondence of the United States by United States Dept. of State, Francis Wharton, John Bassett Moore (1889)
"and yourself, were to come over here immediately with powere to treat, you might
not only obtain peace with America, ..."