List of antonyms from "tame" to antonyms from "tangible"


Discover our 473 antonyms available for the terms "tamed, tandems, tandem, tangible, tamper with, tampon" and many more. Click on one of the words below and go directly to the antonyms associated with it.

Definition of the day : « tangents »

  • As in aside : noun confidential statement
  • As in tack : noun course of movement
  • As in blind alley : noun closed-off passage
  • As in excursus : noun digression
  • As in irrelevancy : noun digression
  • As in parenthesis : noun digression
  • As in grade : noun incline, slope
Example sentences :
  • These tangents meet on the line of centers at A, which will be the pallet center.
  • Extract from : « An Analysis of the Lever Escapement » by H. R. Playtner
  • In the problem of tangents the new process may be described as follows.
  • Extract from : « Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 14, Slice 5 » by Various
  • But as there was usually some method in Mr. Nikolai's tangents, she read on.
  • Extract from : « Why Joan? » by Eleanor Mercein Kelly
  • Erratic, fickle, irrepressible, they are perpetually flying off at tangents.
  • Extract from : « Feminism and Sex-Extinction » by Arabella Kenealy
  • This is equivalent to three points and the tangents at two of them.
  • Extract from : « Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 11, Slice 6 » by Various
  • We then have the case of tangents to three pairs of circles.
  • Extract from : « The Teaching of Geometry » by David Eugene Smith
  • On the first of the tangents the locomotive was stopped at a watering-tank.
  • Extract from : « The King of Arcadia » by Francis Lynde
  • "Ned's on one of his tangents again," said Mrs. Latimer, with a shrug.
  • Extract from : « In the Van; or, The Builders » by John Price-Brown
  • It was the German clavichord that had 'tangents' of brass at the ends of the key levers.
  • Extract from : « Shakespeare and Music » by Edward W. Naylor
  • All the free lines in the room were the tangents of irrelevancy and disorder.
  • Extract from : « Jerome, A Poor Man » by Mary E. Wilkins Freeman