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Antonyms for raze


Grammar : Verb
Spell : reyz
Phonetic Transcription : reɪz



Definition of raze

Origin :
  • 1540s, alteration of racen "pull or knock down" (a building or town), from earlier rasen (14c.) "to scratch, slash, scrape, erase," from Old French raser "to scrape, shave" (see rase). Related: Razed; razing.
  • verb flatten, knock down; wipe out
Example sentences :
  • What, could it be true that they were going to fight again, were going to burn and raze Sedan!
  • Extract from : « The Downfall » by Emile Zola
  • Here an awful blast swept the house, as if to raze it to its foundations.
  • Extract from : « My New Curate » by P.A. Sheehan
  • There were 2,000 houses to raze and new structures to be built.
  • Extract from : « The True Story of Our National Calamity of Flood, Fire and Tornado » by Logan Marshall
  • The only absolutely safe plan is to raze them from the earth.
  • Extract from : « Semiramis and Other Plays » by Olive Tilford Dargan
  • Then the army was set to work, to raze the city to the ground.
  • Extract from : « For the Temple » by G. A. Henty
  • Say, after the war, I'm going there, and I'm just going to raze that place to the ground.
  • Extract from : « Wounds in the rain » by Stephen Crane
  • They shall evacuate Epidaurus, and raze the fortification there.
  • Extract from : « The History of the Peloponnesian War » by Thucydides
  • But as well might they have attempted to raze the foundations of the globe itself.
  • Extract from : « Matilda Montgomerie » by Major (John) Richardson
  • There was nothing to be done but to raze them to the ground.
  • Extract from : « The Life of Mohammad » by Etienne Dinet
  • And it will be well, I trow, to raze the fort to the ground.
  • Extract from : « With Drake on the Spanish Main » by Herbert Strang

Synonyms for raze

Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019