List of antonyms from "Party member" to antonyms from "pass into"
Discover our 369 antonyms available for the terms "pashing, pass buck, pass around, pash, pass by, pass away" and many more. Click on one of the words below and go directly to the antonyms associated with it.
- Party member (3 antonyms)
- Party members (3 antonyms)
- Party pooper (3 antonyms)
- Partying (27 antonyms)
- Pash (17 antonyms)
- Pashed (4 antonyms)
- Pashing (4 antonyms)
- Pasquil (2 antonyms)
- Pasquinaded (4 antonyms)
- Pasquinading (4 antonyms)
- Pass (79 antonyms)
- Pass along (38 antonyms)
- Pass an eye over (1 antonym)
- Pass around (8 antonyms)
- Pass as (15 antonyms)
- Pass away (3 antonyms)
- Pass buck (56 antonyms)
- Pass by (3 antonyms)
- Pass comment (10 antonyms)
- Pass down (18 antonyms)
- Pass for (10 antonyms)
- Pass in (13 antonyms)
- Pass in to (22 antonyms)
- Pass into (22 antonyms)
Definition of the day : « pass along »
- As in lead : verb guide physically
- As in reach : verb stretch to; touch
- There was another interruption, to enable a motor-cyclist to pass along.
- Extract from : « Changing Winds » by St. John G. Ervine
- This will insure attention and silence, and my words will be heard as we pass along.
- Extract from : « The Cat of Bubastes » by G. A. Henty
- News of these events was now beginning to pass along the line ahead.
- Extract from : « Ox-Team Days on the Oregon Trail » by Ezra Meeker
- Pass along at once, and find your quarters and begin to unpack.
- Extract from : « A harum-scarum schoolgirl » by Angela Brazil
- They fill the rooms, and as you pass along the streets they rise in clouds.
- Extract from : « A Boy's Voyage Round the World » by The Son of Samuel Smiles
- It's almost like an inheritance, something you can pass along.
- Extract from : « Blue Bonnet in Boston » by Caroline E. Jacobs
- And the quantities of carriages which pass along the street!
- Extract from : « Poor Folk » by Fyodor Dostoyevsky
- Various groups from time to time continued to pass along the thoroughfare.
- Extract from : « Harold, Complete » by Edward Bulwer-Lytton
- Should you pass along that lonely creek and venture to call a cheery “Hallo!”
- Extract from : « Blue Ridge Country » by Jean Thomas
- To read their names as you pass along is a lesson in Saxon genealogy.
- Extract from : « A July Holiday in Saxony, Bohemia, and Silesia » by Walter White
