List of antonyms from "redivide" to antonyms from "reerect"
Discover our 302 antonyms available for the terms "reenactment, reduced, reduction, reerect, redress" and many more. Click on one of the words below and go directly to the antonyms associated with it.
- Redivide (3 antonyms)
- Redoubt (10 antonyms)
- Redoubted (36 antonyms)
- Redraft (11 antonyms)
- Redraw (6 antonyms)
- Redress (17 antonyms)
- Reduce (36 antonyms)
- Reduce speed (34 antonyms)
- Reduce to tears (34 antonyms)
- Reduced (7 antonyms)
- Reducing (2 antonyms)
- Reduction (2 antonyms)
- Redundancy (4 antonyms)
- Redundant (6 antonyms)
- Reduplicate (16 antonyms)
- Reduplication (6 antonyms)
- Reediting (6 antonyms)
- Reek (2 antonyms)
- Reel (2 antonyms)
- Reel in (33 antonyms)
- Reeling (4 antonyms)
- Reenactment (4 antonyms)
- Reequip (7 antonyms)
- Reerect (14 antonyms)
Definition of the day : « reduplicate »
- As in reproduce : verb make more copies of
- As in replicate : verb copy
- As in copy : verb duplicate
- As in duplicate : verb make a copy; repeat
- As in imitate : verb pretend to be; do an impression of
- He maintains that it is the d in d-d, the reduplicate prterite of do.
- Extract from : « A Handbook of the English Language » by Robert Gordon Latham
- Reduplicate (in stivation), valvate with the margins turned outwards, 97.
- Extract from : « The Elements of Botany » by Asa Gray
- Art gives intelligible ideas of the forms of nature, mechanism attempts to reduplicate their aspects.
- Extract from : « Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 8, Slice 7 » by Various
- In the present English there is no undoubted perfect or reduplicate form.
- Extract from : « A Handbook of the English Language » by Robert Gordon Latham
- History, like a vast whispering gallery, will reduplicate the sound and pass it on to the ages to come.
- Extract from : « The American Missionary -- Volume 39, No. 10, October, 1885 » by Various
- The reduplicate form, in other words, the perfect tense, is current in none of the Gothic languages except the MÅ“so-Gothic.
- Extract from : « A Handbook of the English Language » by Robert Gordon Latham
- The first is formed by a reduplication of the initial Ï„, and, consequently, may be called the reduplicate form.
- Extract from : « A Handbook of the English Language » by Robert Gordon Latham
- Reduplicate, a rarer modification of valvate, is similar but with margins projecting outward.
- Extract from : « The Elements of Botany » by Asa Gray
- Why may not thought's mission be to increase and elevate, rather than simply to imitate and reduplicate, existence?
- Extract from : « The Meaning of Truth » by William James
- Over he goes—and as it happens—as it happens—he has reduplicate fore-limbs, one pair being not unlike wings.
- Extract from : « The Wonderful Visit » by Herbert George Wells