List of antonyms from "catholic" to antonyms from "caught off balance"


Discover our 259 antonyms available for the terms "caught balance, caught in the act, catholicon, catholic, catty" and many more. Click on one of the words below and go directly to the antonyms associated with it.

Definition of the day : « catholicon »

  • As in nostrum : noun cure-all, often ineffective
  • As in panacea : noun cure-all
  • As in cure-all : noun panacea
  • As in medicament : noun cure
  • As in medication : noun cure
  • As in physic : noun cure
  • As in cure : noun solution to problem, often health
Example sentences :
  • I answer it is no catholicon, no panacea; nor is any cure for all diseases to be found.
  • Extract from : « Every Man his own Doctor » by R. T. Claridge
  • The Catholicon is printed in a small type, not very cleanly cut.
  • Extract from : « Fine Books » by Alfred W. Pollard
  • We are now in a position to understand Balbi's performance in the Catholicon.
  • Extract from : « The Age of Erasmus » by P. S. Allen
  • Item satelles dicitur quia adheret alteri ad eius custodiam, Catholicon.
  • Extract from : « Selections from Early Middle English 1130-1250: Part II: Notes » by Various
  • The preface contains a sarcastic harangue in orthodox charlatan style on the merits of the new Catholicon or Panacea.
  • Extract from : « A Short History of French Literature » by George Saintsbury
  • And your petitioners are much afraid that the catholicon above mentioned is much of the same nature.
  • Extract from : « Life and Correspondence of David Hume, Volume I (of 2) » by John Hill Burton
  • I care not much if I untwist my committee-man, and so give him the receipt of this grand Catholicon.
  • Extract from : « Character Writings of the 17th Century » by Various
  • In 1407 there was a collection of fifty service books, and a Catholicon, the latter being perhaps the nucleus of a library.
  • Extract from : « Old English Libraries » by Ernest Savage
  • They are at least copious; the Catholicon is a volume of great bulk.
  • Extract from : « Introduction to the Literature of Europe in the Fifteenth, Sixteenth, and Seventeenth Centuries, Vol. 1 » by Henry Hallam
  • From the great size of the Catholicon, its circulation must have been very limited.
  • Extract from : « Introduction to the Literature of Europe in the Fifteenth, Sixteenth, and Seventeenth Centuries, Vol. 1 » by Henry Hallam