List of antonyms from "leaving mark" to antonyms from "leaving with"


Discover our 371 antonyms available for the terms "leaving the straight and narrow, leaving stranded, leaving the middle, leaving the altar, leaving undone, leaving with" and many more. Click on one of the words below and go directly to the antonyms associated with it.

Definition of the day : « leaving out »

  • As in omission : noun something forgotten or excluded
  • As in except : prep other than
  • As in occlude : verb block, prevent
  • As in omit : verb exclude, forget
  • As in overlook : verb disregard, neglect
  • As in rule out : verb exclude, reject
  • As in skip : verb avoid, miss
  • As in count out : verb disregard, exclude
  • As in eliminate : verb remove, throw out
  • As in exclude : verb expel, forbid
  • As in forgo : verb give up, do without
Example sentences :
  • But you said a moment ago that you were leaving out the Reformation.
  • Extract from : « Brother Copas » by Sir Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch
  • It is like leaving out the effect of friction in a problem of mechanics.
  • Extract from : « The English Utilitarians, Volume II (of 3) » by Leslie Stephen
  • If you want to be terse, he said, you must not start by trying to be terse, by leaving out.
  • Extract from : « Overlooked » by Maurice Baring
  • Beat well six eggs, leaving out one and a half of the whites.
  • Extract from : « Housekeeping in Old Virginia » by Marion Cabell Tyree
  • "Seymour Pendarves," replied I blushing, and leaving out the Mr.
  • Extract from : « A Woman's Love » by Amelia Alderson Opie
  • But those would be all the differences, leaving out the frankness.
  • Extract from : « At the Villa Rose » by A. E. W. Mason
  • But leaving out these last, were the first as wise as the world considers them?
  • Extract from : « Isabella Orsini » by Francesco Domenico Guerrazzi
  • It served him right for leaving out the two best things in Whitby.
  • Extract from : « The Celebrity at Home » by Violet Hunt
  • Beat the eggs, leaving out the whites of four, add them to the milk.
  • Extract from : « The National Cook Book, 9th ed. » by Hannah Mary Peterson
  • But leaving out my arm, every inch of me is as sore as if I had been fighting with a legion of imps!
  • Extract from : « Wuthering Heights » by Emily Bronte