List of antonyms from "de train" to antonyms from "de valuations"


Discover our 789 antonyms available for the terms "de valorize, de valuation, de truncate, de valuates, de-valuate, de-valuations" and many more. Click on one of the words below and go directly to the antonyms associated with it.

Definition of the day : « de train »

  • As in light : verb step down; land
  • As in descend : verb move down, lower a
  • As in disembark : verb get off transportation
  • As in dismount : verb get off something higher
Example sentences :
  • He bust loose from a travellin' jail on de train comin' from Chicago.
  • Extract from : « Lady Luck » by Hugh Wiley
  • Pass on de train de very nex' wick, was lef' Rivière du Loup.
  • Extract from : « Humour of the North » by Lawrence J. Burpee
  • De train is all made up an' de ingine is a steamin', an' de b'ilers is full.
  • Extract from : « Moriah's Mourning and Other Half-Hour Sketches » by Ruth McEnery Stuart
  • When dey got to de train to go home, Miss Calline kissed me good-bye and de yankee didn't know what to say.
  • Extract from : « Slave Narratives: A Folk History of Slavery in the United States From Interviews with Former Slaves » by Work Projects Administration
  • An' de train rocks so, laik a cradle, dat I done most upsot ebery time.
  • Extract from : « The Bobbsey Twins at Home » by Laura Lee Hope
  • I helped dem get a bloon down from a tree, load it on de wagon and took it to de train.
  • Extract from : « Bound to Succeed » by Allen Chapman
  • De train go 'long w'en dey git de log shov' off, an' de conductaire, he com' long an' seen me sit dere.
  • Extract from : « Connie Morgan in the Lumber Camps » by James B. Hendryx
  • De train she gon' ver' fas' an' by-m-by she com' to de breege, an' Birch Lak' is wan half mile.
  • Extract from : « Connie Morgan in the Lumber Camps » by James B. Hendryx
  • Bright and early next mornin' I went down to de depot to see de most of my folks go off on de train to Atlanta on a picnic.
  • Extract from : « Slave Narratives: A Folk History of Slavery in the United States » by Work Projects Administration
  • Den 'spose I meet Missy at de train an' slip de papah in her han'.
  • Extract from : « The Lost Despatch » by Natalie Sumner Lincoln