List of antonyms from "sit in on" to antonyms from "skedaddle"
Discover our 595 antonyms available for the terms "sit out, sitcom, situation, sizable, sit still for" and many more. Click on one of the words below and go directly to the antonyms associated with it.
- Sit in on (41 antonyms)
- Sit on (142 antonyms)
- Sit on the fence (19 antonyms)
- Sit on top of (29 antonyms)
- Sit out (42 antonyms)
- Sit still for (56 antonyms)
- Sit through (28 antonyms)
- Sit up for (12 antonyms)
- Sitcom (3 antonyms)
- Site (1 antonym)
- Sitter (3 antonyms)
- Sitting (1 antonym)
- Sitting target (2 antonyms)
- Situated (2 antonyms)
- Situation (2 antonyms)
- Sixty-four dollar question (4 antonyms)
- Sizable (8 antonyms)
- Size (4 antonyms)
- Size of it (9 antonyms)
- Size up (97 antonyms)
- Sizing (51 antonyms)
- Skate on thin ice (21 antonyms)
- Sked (1 antonym)
- Skedaddle (17 antonyms)
Definition of the day : « sit through »
- As in remain : verb stay, wait
- As in endure : verb bear hardship
- As in hang tough : verb endure
- He could sit through supper night after night and not utter a word in his gloom.
- Extract from : « The Harbor » by Ernest Poole
- It is one of the minor trials of life to have to sit through the process.
- Extract from : « Things as They Are » by Amy Wilson-Carmichael
- He wondered how many more breakfasts like that he was going to have to sit through.
- Extract from : « The Cosmic Computer » by Henry Beam Piper
- But before we left him he insisted that we should sit through his favourite "Frou-Frou."
- Extract from : « Poor Folk in Spain » by Jan Gordon
- Then, I know, baby James had to sit through a two or three hour sermon.
- Extract from : « The Spell of Scotland » by Keith Clark
- It was not worth while to sit through the slaughter of thirty buffaloes.
- Extract from : « The Sunset Trail » by Alfred Henry Lewis
- Say, it beats me how white women can go there and sit through it.
- Extract from : « The Sheriff of Badger » by George B. Pattullo
- I stagger around as long as I can stand, then I sit through his abuse.
- Extract from : « The Harvester » by Gene Stratton Porter
- Unless we can sit through the service with patience, we should not attend it.
- Extract from : « Lessons on Manners » by Edith E. Wiggin
- She felt she could not sit through the first part of the program.
- Extract from : « Fanny Herself » by Edna Ferber