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List of antonyms from "out come" to antonyms from "out flank"


Discover our 1319 antonyms available for the terms "out door, out cries, out crying, out fitting, out fitted" and many more. Click on one of the words below and go directly to the antonyms associated with it.


Definition of the day : « out doors »

  • As in out : adv outside, outdoors
  • As in without : adv outside
  • As in al fresco : adv out-of-doors
  • As in nature : noun earth, creation
  • As in outdoors : noun open air; nature
  • As in outside : noun exterior; out-of-doors
  • As in open air : noun where air is unconfined
  • As in country : noun rural area; area away from city
Example sentences :
  • He said there was all out doors in front of him and only two feet behind.
  • Extract from : « Cap'n Warren's Wards » by Joseph C. Lincoln
  • He wasn't as big as all out doors, nor he wasn't any vest-pocket edition either.
  • Extract from : « Shorty McCabe » by Sewell Ford
  • The jacks I'm traveling with are out doors; these are their tin-types.
  • Extract from : « On a Donkey's Hurricane Deck » by R. Pitcher Woodward
  • Andrea was glad to be out doors, but she felt little improved.
  • Extract from : « The Mesmerist's Victim » by Alexandre Dumas
  • Livin out doors the way I had, I naturally had a big respect for brands.
  • Extract from : « Friar Tuck » by Robert Alexander Wason
  • She had a heart as big as all out doors but it was not big enough to hold Aunt Clay.
  • Extract from : « Molly Brown of Kentucky » by Nell Speed
  • They were possibly having just a little too much of out doors.
  • Extract from : « The Outdoor Girls in a Motor Car » by Laura Lee Hope
  • Then she tied up her working clothes in a bundle, crept softly down stairs, and out doors.
  • Extract from : « The Adventures of Ann » by Mary E. Wilkins Freeman
  • Up she got, put on her clothes hurriedly, crept softly down stairs and out doors.
  • Extract from : « The Adventures of Ann » by Mary E. Wilkins Freeman
  • Job was sitting in the easy-chair, out doors, where the shadow of the house sloped across the grassy lawn.
  • Extract from : « Father Brighthopes » by John Townsend Trowbridge