Find the synonyms or antonyms of a word
List of antonyms from "quenchless" to antonyms from "quick and dirty"
Discover our 261 antonyms available for the terms "querulous, questionless, query, quibbling routine, questions" and many more. Click on one of the words below and go directly to the antonyms associated with it.
- Quenchless (5 antonyms)
- Queried (6 antonyms)
- Querulous (3 antonyms)
- Querulousness (25 antonyms)
- Query (11 antonyms)
- Quest (1 antonym)
- Quested (15 antonyms)
- Questing (15 antonyms)
- Question (14 antonyms)
- Questionability (2 antonyms)
- Questionable (12 antonyms)
- Questionableness (18 antonyms)
- Questionably (3 antonyms)
- Questioned (9 antonyms)
- Questionless (14 antonyms)
- Questions (14 antonyms)
- Quests (1 antonym)
- Queue (2 antonyms)
- Queued (15 antonyms)
- Queuing (15 antonyms)
- Quibbling routine (15 antonyms)
- Quibblings (21 antonyms)
- Quick (21 antonyms)
- Quick and dirty (4 antonyms)
Definition of the day : « quests »
- noun search, exploration
- We seem never to reach the ultimate origins or to find an end to our quests.
- Extract from : « The Apple-Tree » by L. H. Bailey
- Of all their quests, this seemed the most vague and hopeless.
- Extract from : « Roger Ingleton, Minor » by Talbot Baines Reed
- Next she asked me if there chanced to be any other African quests upon which I had set my mind.
- Extract from : « The Ivory Child » by H. Rider Haggard
- Always command me, Miss Joyce, and I will always fly on your quests.
- Extract from : « Thorley Weir » by E. F. (Edward Frederic) Benson
- It is not he so much that makes the quests, as that the quests are made of him.
- Extract from : « Popular scientific lectures » by Ernst Mach
- I was glad of this, being weary of quests for the time being.
- Extract from : « The Bonadventure » by Edmund Blunden
- His riddles and his quests, his ideals and delights are largely physical.
- Extract from : « Abraham Lincoln's Cardinal Traits; » by Clark S. Beardslee
- A kind of intermediary nymph—an enchantress indeed—who has assisted and advised him in his quests for the goddess.
- Extract from : « A History of the French Novel, Vol. 1 » by George Saintsbury
- He believed quite simply that it was the working of a law, not the breaking of one, which gave answer and led him in his quests.
- Extract from : « The Lost Prince » by Frances Hodgson Burnett
- Thus ended the three quests which followed the marriage of King Arthur and Guenever the fair.
- Extract from : « Historic Tales, Vol. XIII (of 15) » by Charles Morris