Antonyms for resultant


Grammar : Noun
Spell : ri-zuhl-tnt
Phonetic Transcription : rɪˈzʌl tnt


Definition of resultant

Origin :
  • early 15c., from French résultant and directly from Medieval Latin resultantem (nominative resultans), present participle of resultare (see result (v.)).
  • noun effect
Example sentences :
  • All progress, large or small, is the resultant of many forces.
  • Extract from : « The Call of the Twentieth Century » by David Starr Jordan
  • Observations can show us only the resultant of these two motions.
  • Extract from : « Sir William Herschel: His Life and Works » by Edward Singleton Holden
  • It is for reasoning to separate this resultant into its two components.
  • Extract from : « Sir William Herschel: His Life and Works » by Edward Singleton Holden
  • During the resultant silence, Anna distinctly heard her own heart beating.
  • Extract from : « Rope » by Holworthy Hall
  • And we'll take the resultant Kedy and make nine duplicates of him.
  • Extract from : « Masters of Space » by Edward Elmer Smith
  • Had he anticipated the resultant display of force, he would have hesitated.
  • Extract from : « "Wee Tim'rous Beasties" » by Douglas English
  • The two men tensed against the resultant shock and were silent for a time.
  • Extract from : « Millennium » by Everett B. Cole
  • The school age, a resultant of the first three, is a record of progress in school.
  • Extract from : « The New Education » by Scott Nearing
  • The resultant drawing is one of the very noblest of his second period.
  • Extract from : « The Crown of Wild Olive » by John Ruskin
  • It was the resultant of every force of, I might say, my special business propulsion.
  • Extract from : « Flamsted quarries » by Mary E. Waller

Synonyms for resultant

Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019