Antonyms for give over
Grammar : Verb |
Spell : giv |
Phonetic Transcription : gɪv |
- agree
- assert
- bear
- begin
- borrow
- build
- care
- carry on
- come
- commence
- complete
- connect
- continue
- counter
- create
- defend
- deny
- disallow
- disapprove
- disbelieve
- distrust
- do
- endure
- fight
- finish
- gain
- give
- give birth
- go
- go on
- hide
- hinder
- hold
- ignore
- impede
- increase
- initiate
- join
- keep
- keep on
- maintain
- mistrust
- obstruct
- open
- oppose
- persevere
- persist
- prevent
- profit
- pursue
- receive
- refuse
- reject
- remain
- restart
- resume
- retain
- retry
- rise
- start
- stay
- straighten
- take
- unite
- veto
- win
- withhold
Definition of give over
Origin :- Old English giefan (W. Saxon) "to give, bestow; allot, grant; commit, devote, entrust," class V strong verb (past tense geaf, past participle giefen), from Proto-Germanic *gebanan (cf. Old Frisian jeva, Middle Dutch gheven, Dutch geven, Old High German geban, German geben, Gothic giban), from PIE *ghabh- "to take, hold, have, give" (see habit). It became yiven in Middle English, but changed to guttural "g" by influence of Old Norse gefa "to give," Old Danish givæ. Meaning "to yield to pressure" is from 1570s.
- Give in "yield" is from 1610s; give out is mid-14c., "publish, announce;" meaning "run out, break down" is from 1520s. Give up "surrender" is mid-12c. To give (someone) a cold seems to reflect the old belief that one could be cured of disease by deliberately infecting others. What gives? "what is happening?" is attested from 1940. Give-and-take (n.) is originally from horse racing (1769) and refers to races in which bigger horses were given more weight to carry, lighter ones less. General sense attested by 1778.
- As in knock off : verb stop action; accomplish
- As in leave : verb give, especially after death
- As in leave off : verb stop
- As in quit : verb stop doing something
- As in trust : verb give to for safekeeping
- As in turn over : verb give, transfer
- As in yield : verb give in, surrender
- As in cease : verb stop, conclude
- As in desist : verb stop, refrain from
- As in discontinue : verb prevent activity from going on
- As in forfeit : verb give up something in sacrifice
- But at length they began to give over, from mere incapacity to hold any more.
- Extract from : « Tanglewood Tales » by Nathaniel Hawthorne
- One or the other must give over, and that one was White Fang.
- Extract from : « White Fang » by Jack London
- I begged him to give over his pursuit, and not to speak to her again.
- Extract from : « Memoirs of Marguerite de Valois, Complete » by Marguerite de Valois, Queen of Navarre
- Do you think he's going to give over this country to a papist?
- Extract from : « Wild Justice: Stories of the South Seas » by Lloyd Osbourne
- It would be hard, nay, impossible, to give over that solace.
- Extract from : « Elsie Marley, Honey » by Joslyn Gray
- He did not give over his concern for Mars Plaisir because he was glad of his absence.
- Extract from : « The Hour and the Man » by Harriet Martineau
- You'll give over your horse to Chilina, who'll go off and warn the signorina.
- Extract from : « Columba » by Prosper Merimee
- And this reminds me that I must give over writing to you, and fall to my article.
- Extract from : « Life and Letters of Lord Macaulay » by George Otto Trevelyan
- Master Fenton, talk not to me; my mind is heavy: IÂ will give over all.
- Extract from : « The Merry Wives of Windsor » by William Shakespeare
- A year passed, and we were compelled at last to give over the search.
- Extract from : « Children of the Tenements » by Jacob A. Riis
Synonyms for give over
- abandon
- abdicate
- abstain
- achieve
- admit defeat
- advance
- aid
- allot
- apportion
- assign
- avoid
- back down
- back off
- bag it
- be deprived of
- be stripped of
- bend
- bequeath
- bequest
- blow off
- bow
- break
- break off
- bring to an end
- buy
- call it a day
- call it quits
- capitulate
- cave in
- cease
- cede
- close
- close out
- collapse
- come across with
- come to an end
- come to terms
- command
- commend
- commission
- commit
- complete
- conclude
- confer
- confide
- consign
- convey
- crumple
- culminate
- cut it out
- defer
- delegate
- deliver
- demise
- desist
- devise
- die
- disconnect
- discontinue
- disjoin
- dissever
- disunite
- drop
- eliminate
- end
- entrust
- fail
- feed
- find
- finish
- fold
- fold up
- forbear
- furnish
- get on the wagon
- give notice
- give oneself over
- give over
- give up
- give way
- go
- grant
- halt
- hand
- hand down
- hand over
- hang it up
- have done with
- intermit
- interpose
- interrupt
- intervene
- kick over
- kick the habit
- kill
- knock off
- knuckle
- knuckle under
- lay down arms
- leave
- leave behind
- leave off
- legate
- lend
- let
- let go
- let out
- loan
- lose
- make trustee
- not do
- pack in
- part
- part with
- pass on
- patronize
- pause
- provide
- put an end to
- put into hands of
- quit
- quit cold
- quit cold turkey
- refer
- refrain
- refrain from
- relax
- relegate
- relent
- relinquish
- render
- renounce
- resign
- retire
- sacrifice
- sag
- scrub
- secede
- separate
- sew up
- shut down
- sign over
- stay
- stop
- stop work
- store
- submit
- succeed
- succumb
- suffer defeat
- supply
- surcease
- surrender
- suspend
- take the cure
- terminate
- throw in the towel
- transfer
- transmit
- turn over
- will
- wind up
- withdraw
- wrap up
- yield
Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019