What is another word for have rather?

Pronunciation: [hav ɹˈɑːðə] (IPA)

The phrase "have rather" is commonly used to express a preference or choice between two or more options. Some synonyms for this phrase include "would rather," "prefer," "opt for," "choose," and "select." Each of these alternatives can be used interchangeably with "have rather" in most cases, although some may be preferred depending on the context or tone of the sentence. For instance, "would rather" may be more appropriate for formal writing, while "prefer" may be better suited for casual or conversational language. Ultimately, all of these phrases convey the same meaning and allow speakers and writers to express their preferences and choices in different ways.

What are the hypernyms for Have rather?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Famous quotes with Have rather

  • Yes, I would have rather finished up in Pittsburgh.
    Franco Harris
  • Some Critics on the Hearth are not only good-natured, but have rather too high, or, if that is impossible, let us say too pronounced, an opinion of the abilities of their literary friends.
    James Payn
  • It may be important to write a book that doesn't come up to what I would like to have rather than to write no book at all.
    Sheri S. Tepper
  • It is better to be concerned with being than with nothingness. Dream therefore of what you still have rather than what you have lost.
    Joseph Joubert
  • The efforts of a multitude of writers have rather been directed towards producing alternatives for Euclid which shall be more suitable, that is to say, easier, for schoolboys. It is of course not surprising that, in these days of short cuts, there should have arisen a movement to get rid of Euclid and to substitute "a royal road to geometry"; the marvel is that a book which was not written for schoolboys but for grown men (as all internal evidence shows, and in particular the essentially theoretical character of the work and its aloofness from anything of the nature of "practical" geometry) should have held its own as a schoolbook for so long.
    Thomas Little Heath

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