List of antonyms from "incitation" to antonyms from "income"


Discover our 270 antonyms available for the terms "included, incitement, inciter, incog, inclined plane, inclusive" and many more. Click on one of the words below and go directly to the antonyms associated with it.

Definition of the day : « incog »

  • As in incognito : adj in disguise
  • As in unknown : adj obscure, mysterious
  • As in concealed : adj hidden, secret
  • As in covert : adj clandestine, underhanded
  • As in disguised : adj unrecognizable
Example sentences :
  • For aught we know the ould lady was thravellin' incog—like me.
  • Extract from : « Soldier Stories » by Rudyard Kipling
  • This Prince had been for some time in France; and tho' he was incog.
  • Extract from : « The Memoirs of Charles-Lewis, Baron de Pollnitz, Volume III » by Karl Ludwig von Pllnitz
  • The Jedge might call you out, sir, for intruding upon his incog.
  • Extract from : « Short Story Classics (American) Vol. 2 » by Various
  • The straw bonnet—you see people cannot tell whether you are not incog, as yet—'
  • Extract from : « The Young Step-Mother » by Charlotte M. Yonge
  • Pray, also, give Nipkin a hint not to bestow any undue attention on Mr. Cashel, who wants to be incog.
  • Extract from : « Roland Cashel » by Charles James Lever
  • Then handing it to his daughter, and instructing the young girl how to deliver it incog, he despatches her upon her errand.
  • Extract from : « The Fatal Cord » by Mayne Reid
  • So one day I got tired of working out Rubiyt motifs in brass, and I went over to the caf for luncheon, incog.
  • Extract from : « Yellowstone Nights » by Herbert Quick
  • A ludicrous adventure into which the king was led by his mania for going about incog.
  • Extract from : « Life and Times of Her Majesty Caroline Matilda, Vol. I (of III) » by C. F. Lachelles Wraxall
  • Abraham Lincoln, we like to think, was a typical American, but were one to encounter him incog.
  • Extract from : « Idling in Italy » by Joseph Collins
  • Barring the “habits,” such a Gipsy is as much a Gipsy as before, although he is one incog.
  • Extract from : « A History of the Gipsies » by Walter Simson