List of antonyms from "quaver" to antonyms from "quenchings"


Discover our 550 antonyms available for the terms "quavering, quelch, queasy, queerness, queenly, queen" and many more. Click on one of the words below and go directly to the antonyms associated with it.

Definition of the day : « queerly »

  • As in oddly : adv curiously
  • As in peculiarly : adv oddly
  • As in strangely : adv oddly
Example sentences :
  • Queerly he realized that death would be easy for himself, simple, acceptable.
  • Extract from : « Red Fleece » by Will Levington Comfort
  • Queerly enough, it was the great preparer, Darwin, who helped her at the last.
  • Extract from : « She Buildeth Her House » by Will Comfort
  • Queerly enough, it was her good-by to Aloysius that most unnerved her.
  • Extract from : « Fanny Herself » by Edna Ferber
  • Queerly enough, the sermon was on the return of the Prodigal Son.
  • Extract from : « The Wedge of Gold » by C. C. Goodwin
  • Queerly enough, instead of cooling me off toward the girl, Robert's criticism of her had the opposite effect.
  • Extract from : « The Chauffeur and the Chaperon » by C. N. Williamson
  • Queerly enough, it didn't have any name at all: it just had the figures '100' painted in gilt letters on its side.
  • Extract from : « Harper's Round Table, June 18, 1895 » by Various
  • Queerly enough, Jessie Heath, mountain-wise though she was, believed in him almost to the end.
  • Extract from : « Gigolo » by Edna Ferber
  • Queerly enough, the women brought with them a baby or little guanaco, which they led by a string.
  • Extract from : « The Story of Magellan and The Discovery of the Philippines » by Hezekiah Butterworth
  • Queerly, as he shot down through the water, he thought again of something outside the desperate need of self-preservation.
  • Extract from : « The Castle Of The Shadows » by Alice Muriel Williamson
  • Queerly enough, M. Guizot on Tuesday had made precisely the same remark to me about the King, beginning with the defects.
  • Extract from : « The Memoirs of Victor Hugo » by Victor Hugo