List of antonyms from "languishment" to antonyms from "lapping over"
Discover our 243 antonyms available for the terms "languor, lanky, lap of the gods, lapidates, lapidify, lap over" and many more. Click on one of the words below and go directly to the antonyms associated with it.
- Languishment (4 antonyms)
- Languor (7 antonyms)
- Languorous (1 antonym)
- Languorousness (12 antonyms)
- Lankiness (4 antonyms)
- Lanky (5 antonyms)
- Lanugo (1 antonym)
- Lap (5 antonyms)
- Lap against (1 antonym)
- Lap god (17 antonyms)
- Lap of luxury (21 antonyms)
- Lap of the gods (17 antonyms)
- Lap over (2 antonyms)
- Lap up (64 antonyms)
- Lapel (5 antonyms)
- Lapidarian (9 antonyms)
- Lapidate (16 antonyms)
- Lapidated (16 antonyms)
- Lapidates (16 antonyms)
- Lapidify (7 antonyms)
- Lapped (5 antonyms)
- Lapped against (1 antonym)
- Lapping (5 antonyms)
- Lapping over (2 antonyms)
Definition of the day : « languor »
- noun lethargy
- Outside the door of the anaesthetizing-room Miss Harrison's languor vanished.
- Extract from : « K » by Mary Roberts Rinehart
- Under her mask of languor, Carlotta's heart was beating wildly.
- Extract from : « K » by Mary Roberts Rinehart
- Moderation is the languor and sloth of the soul, Ambition its activity and heat.
- Extract from : « Reflections » by Francois Duc De La Rochefoucauld
- "I think I will go in," says Charlotte, with a pretence of languor.
- Extract from : « The Cavalier » by George Washington Cable
- No languor, no dull headache, no exhaustion, follows your experience.
- Extract from : « The Forest » by Stewart Edward White
- From the eighth month she fell into a fever, into exhaustion and languor.
- Extract from : « The Memoirs of Madame de Montespan, Complete » by Madame La Marquise De Montespan
- But languor at last overcame her, and she fell into gentle slumber.
- Extract from : « The Fortune of the Rougons » by Emile Zola
- Frank Dalton was awake, but in all the languor of great debility.
- Extract from : « The Daltons, Volume II (of II) » by Charles James Lever
- On waking in the morning we all p. 263experienced languor and lassitude.
- Extract from : « Memoirs » by Charles Godfrey Leland
- Who is he that would not, under such circumstances, sink into languor?
- Extract from : « The Mirror of Taste, and Dramatic Censor » by Stephen Cullen Carpenter