List of antonyms from "shut the door on" to antonyms from "side remark"
Discover our 332 antonyms available for the terms "sickest, side-by-side, sickle, sicker, Siberian" and many more. Click on one of the words below and go directly to the antonyms associated with it.
- Shut the door on (35 antonyms)
- Shut up (2 antonyms)
- Shuteye (7 antonyms)
- Shutout (15 antonyms)
- Shy (35 antonyms)
- Shy away (32 antonyms)
- Shyness (1 antonym)
- Siamese twin (1 antonym)
- Siberia (4 antonyms)
- Siberian (35 antonyms)
- Sick and tired (19 antonyms)
- Sick and tired of (11 antonyms)
- Sick as a dog (19 antonyms)
- Sick in the head (3 antonyms)
- Sick of (18 antonyms)
- Sicken (9 antonyms)
- Sickening (8 antonyms)
- Sicker (16 antonyms)
- Sickest (16 antonyms)
- Sickle (13 antonyms)
- Sickly (9 antonyms)
- Sickness (4 antonyms)
- Side-by-side (19 antonyms)
- Side remark (1 antonym)
Definition of the day : « sickle »
- As in knife : noun cutting tool
- As in machete : noun weapon
- As in crescent : noun sickle-shaped object
- As in mow : verb cut
- As in cut : verb sever, chop with sharp instrument; incise
- The American pioneers had only a sickle or a scythe with which to cut their grain.
- Extract from : « The Age of Invention » by Holland Thompson
- From behind the hills peeped the edge of the moon—a sickle of burnished copper.
- Extract from : « The Sea-Hawk » by Raphael Sabatini
- The shoots are then topped off with a sickle, corn-cutter or similar tool.
- Extract from : « Manual of American Grape-Growing » by U. P. Hedrick
- The wheat was ripe for the sickle, but there was not a man or boy to (p. 021)cut it.
- Extract from : « Charles Carleton Coffin » by William Elliot Griffis, D. D.
- The scythe, the sickle, and the flail were the same as their forbears had used for centuries.
- Extract from : « Union and Democracy » by Allen Johnson
- From horn to horn of the sickle galloped the riderless horses.
- Extract from : « The Long Roll » by Mary Johnston
- Situated in the handle of the Sickle, and the right fore paw of the Lion.
- Extract from : « A Field Book of the Stars » by William Tyler Olcott
- Then he gave the magician a blow with the sickle and cut off his head.
- Extract from : « Italian Popular Tales » by Thomas Frederick Crane
- This I cut with a sickle, and then thrashed it with a flail.
- Extract from : « By Canoe and Dog-Train » by Egerton Ryerson Young
- Down they went before the Spanish blades like corn before the sickle.
- Extract from : « Ronald Morton, or the Fire Ships » by W.H.G. Kingston
