
Originally Posted by
Rover_KE
It's fine.
Also fine are
'The world could no longer wait'. and
'No longer could the world wait.'
Rover
More: http://www.usingenglish.com/forum/as...-no-loger.html
Is it a must to get the subject and auxiliary verb reversed when you start your sentence with "No longer?"

Originally Posted by
Rover_KE
For examples of single words used in a variety of contexts, avail yourself of the advantages of the
FrazeIt website.
Rover
What a great site! Thank you, Rover, from the bottom of my heart.
"No longer is he merely an idea, no longer do we have to form a picture of him on the basis of mere words."
More: 54436 sentence examples using No Longer I checked the above site in which I found that the subject and auxiliary (is) are being reversed. Surely, when the phrase "no longer" comes at the beginning of the sentence.
Example:
"He no longer smokes."
More: no longer - definition of no longer by the Free Online Dictionary, Thesaurus and Encyclopedia.
Rewrite the above sentence starting with the negative phrase "no longer."
My suggestion:
No longer does he smoke. Does this sentence make sense?