Find the synonyms or antonyms of a word
Synonyms for round out
Grammar : Verb |
Spell : round |
Phonetic Transcription : raʊnd |
Top 10 synonyms for round out Other synonyms for the word round out
- actualize
- aggravate
- amplify
- augment
- be inflated
- become bloated
- become distended
- become swollen
- belly
- billow
- blister
- bring to fruition
- bring to maturity
- call it a day
- cap
- carry off
- coarsen
- conclude
- consummate
- cram
- crown
- determine
- develop
- dilate
- discharge
- distend
- do
- do thoroughly
- effect
- effectuate
- elaborate
- end
- enhance
- enlarge
- equip
- execute
- expand
- extend
- fatten
- feed
- fill
- fill out
- finalize
- finish
- fulfill
- furnish
- gain weight
- get through
- go the limit
- go through with
- go whole hog
- grow
- grow larger
- halt
- heighten
- increase
- intensity
- make good
- make up
- mount
- overfeed
- perfect
- perform
- plump
- pouch
- pout
- protrude
- puff
- puff up
- put flesh on
- put on weight
- put to bed
- realize
- refine
- rise
- round off
- round out
- settle
- sew up
- spread
- stuff
- supplement
- surge
- swell
- swell out
- terminate
- thicken
- thrive
- tumefy
- ultimate
- uprise
- wax
- well up
- wind up
- wrap up
Définition of round out
Origin :- late 13c., from Anglo-French rounde, Old French roont (12c., Modern French rond), probably originally *redond, from Vulgar Latin *retundus (cf. Provençal redon, Spanish redondo, Old Italian ritondo), from Latin rotundus "like a wheel, circular, round," related to rota "wheel" (see rotary).
- As an adverb from c.1300; as a preposition from c.1600. In many uses it is a shortened form of around. The French word is the source of Middle Dutch ront (Dutch rond), Middle High German runt (German rund) and similar Germanic words.
- Of numbers from mid-14c., from earlier sense "full, complete, brought to completion" (mid-14c., notion of symmetry extended to that of completeness). First record of round trip is from 1844, originally of railways. Round heels attested from 1926, in reference to incompetent boxers, 1927 in reference to loose women, in either case implying an inability to avoid ending up flat on one's back.
- As in swell : verb become larger
- As in fill out : verb enlarge
- As in complete : verb carry out action
- As in fatten : verb grow or make bigger; nourish
- We just need her to round out, I was going to say, the atmosphere.
- Extract from : « The Girls at Mount Morris » by Amanda Minnie Douglas
- To complete it, he had felt that he must round out his days with the woman he loved.
- Extract from : « Mistress Anne » by Temple Bailey
- Can you think of anything I might add, to round out the tale, as it were?
- Extract from : « A New Sensation » by Albert Ross
- In other words, you could only round out your life by rubbing shoulders with disreputables.
- Extract from : « My Life » by Josiah Flynt
- The process of taking the round out of a book when the edge is cut.
- Extract from : « Notes on Bookbinding for Libraries » by John Cotton Dana
- There was nothing left for it but to attempt to round out the night with sleep.
- Extract from : « Green Eyes » by Roy J. Snell
- The following outline may, therefore, help to round out the picture.
- Extract from : « The Training of a Forester » by Gifford Pinchot
- When books are cut in boards it is necessary to take the round out of the back.
- Extract from : « Library Bookbinding » by Arthur Low Bailey
- I'll stay here and round out a couple of other ideas for his campaign.
- Extract from : « The Clarion » by Samuel Hopkins Adams
- This day holds the moment which is to round out the fulness of time.
- Extract from : « In the Days of Poor Richard » by Irving Bacheller
Antonyms for round out
- abandon
- abridge
- bear
- begin
- commence
- compress
- concentrate
- condense
- continue
- contract
- create
- curtail
- decline
- decrease
- deflate
- deplete
- diminish
- drop
- fail
- fall
- forget
- give up
- ignore
- introduce
- leave
- lessen
- lose
- lower
- miss
- neglect
- not finish
- open
- reduce
- ruin
- shorten
- shrink
- slump
- start
- stop
- thin
- undernourish
- unsettle
Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019