Find the synonyms or antonyms of a word
List of antonyms from "go out with" to antonyms from "go to seed"
Discover our 442 antonyms available for the terms "go short, go places, go that route, go over, go out with" and many more. Click on one of the words below and go directly to the antonyms associated with it.
- Go out with (21 antonyms)
- Go over (2 antonyms)
- Go over big (50 antonyms)
- Go over the hill (16 antonyms)
- Go over to (12 antonyms)
- Go places (45 antonyms)
- Go riding (8 antonyms)
- Go round (6 antonyms)
- Go scot-free (21 antonyms)
- Go separate ways (22 antonyms)
- Go shopping (13 antonyms)
- Go short (5 antonyms)
- Go south (30 antonyms)
- Go steady (13 antonyms)
- Go steady with (3 antonyms)
- Go swimming (1 antonym)
- Go-that-a-way (12 antonyms)
- Go that route (37 antonyms)
- Go the limit (50 antonyms)
- Go through (5 antonyms)
- Go to extremes (19 antonyms)
- Go to it (3 antonyms)
- Go to see (5 antonyms)
- Go to seed (43 antonyms)
Definition of the day : « go steady »
- As in woo : verb seek as romantic partner
- As in court : verb fawn over, pay attention to
- As in date : verb see person socially
- “But I expect Dick thinks it was worth his while to have to go steady,” said Cresswell.
- Extract from : « Follow My leader » by Talbot Baines Reed
- Not to try and run, not to break out of a walk; to go steady, and yet keep ahead!
- Extract from : « Saint's Progress » by John Galsworthy
- He says, 'Be careful, you, of the water-pot; go steady with your syringe.
- Extract from : « Rest Harrow » by Maurice Hewlett
- This puts the minx entirely in my power; le tour est joué; she will now go steady in harness, or I will know the reason why.
- Extract from : « Prince Otto » by Robert Louis Stevenson
- By riding slow, I mean taking a pull about three or four lengths from the fence, and getting your horse to go steady and look.
- Extract from : « The Sportswoman's Library, Vol. 1 of 2 » by Various
- This puts the minx entirely in my power; le tour est jou; she will now go steady in harness, or I will know the reason why.
- Extract from : « The Works of Robert Louis Stevenson - Swanston Edition Vol. 7 (of 25) » by Robert Louis Stevenson
- However, I determined to go steady, and I crept up to a dark thorn-bush and stood still.
- Extract from : « At Suvla Bay » by John Hargrave