Find the synonyms or antonyms of a word
List of antonyms from "satirist" to antonyms from "saved"
Discover our 336 antonyms available for the terms "savagery, satisfaction, satirize, save it, saunter, sauciness" and many more. Click on one of the words below and go directly to the antonyms associated with it.
- Satirist (2 antonyms)
- Satirize (1 antonym)
- Satisfaction (21 antonyms)
- Satisfactory (11 antonyms)
- Satisfied (3 antonyms)
- Satisfies (44 antonyms)
- Satisfy (44 antonyms)
- Satisfying (7 antonyms)
- Saturate (5 antonyms)
- Saturated (1 antonym)
- Saturnalian (37 antonyms)
- Saturninity (30 antonyms)
- Satyr (1 antonym)
- Sauced (3 antonyms)
- Sauciness (16 antonyms)
- Saucy (3 antonyms)
- Saunter (6 antonyms)
- Savage (27 antonyms)
- Savagery (2 antonyms)
- Savant (2 antonyms)
- Save (26 antonyms)
- Save for rainy day (25 antonyms)
- Save it (12 antonyms)
- Saved (7 antonyms)
Definition of the day : « sauced »
- As in juicy : adj moist
- As in plastered : adj drunk
- Sadie, having "sauced" her landlady, found it wise to change her quarters.
- Extract from : « Winnie Childs » by C. N. Williamson
- You get no common beef at clubs; there is a manzy of different things all sauced up to be unlike themsels.
- Extract from : « Margaret Ogilvy » by J. M. Barrie
- It was sauced with a savage appetite purchased by hard riding the day before, and refreshing sleep in a pure atmosphere.
- Extract from : « The Innocents Abroad » by Mark Twain (Samuel Clemens)
- In taking the money the clerk had sauced him and he had retaliated to the best of his ability.
- Extract from : « The Mystery of the Clasped Hands » by Guy Boothby
- Know that capons or chickens be arrayed after one sauce; the chickens shall be sauced with green sauce or veriuyce.
- Extract from : « The accomplisht cook » by Robert May
- He is told to be cautious, and we catch him writing a letter to you, and we foil the attempt, and get sauced at for our pains.
- Extract from : « Mattie:--A Stray (Vol 3 of 3) » by Frederick William Robinson
- Let gentle admonicion be oure rodde, and sometyme chydyng also, but sauced wyth mekenes, not bitternes.
- Extract from : « The Education of Children » by Desiderius Erasmus