List of antonyms from "de vitalizing" to antonyms from "dead duck"
Discover our 1897 antonyms available for the terms "de votes, de-voted, de-void, dead-center, de voted, de vitalizing" and many more. Click on one of the words below and go directly to the antonyms associated with it.
- De vitalizing (91 antonyms)
- De-vitalizing (91 antonyms)
- De-void (45 antonyms)
- De void (45 antonyms)
- De vote (125 antonyms)
- De-vote (125 antonyms)
- De voted (368 antonyms)
- De-voted (368 antonyms)
- De votes (125 antonyms)
- De-votes (125 antonyms)
- De-voting (125 antonyms)
- De voting (125 antonyms)
- Deaconed (22 antonyms)
- Dead (33 antonyms)
- Dead air (12 antonyms)
- Dead airs (12 antonyms)
- Dead and gone (11 antonyms)
- Dead-beat (11 antonyms)
- Dead broke (8 antonyms)
- Dead-center (4 antonyms)
- Dead center (4 antonyms)
- Dead drunk (1 antonym)
- Dead-drunk (1 antonym)
- Dead duck (20 antonyms)
Definition of the day : « dead air »
- As in quiet : noun calmness, silence
- As in silence : noun absence of sound, speech
- As in noiselessness : noun silence
- As in quietness : noun silence
- As in soundlessness : noun silence
- As in speechlessness : noun silence
- A piercing chill grew in the dead air; the silence was terrifying.
- Extract from : « In the Border Country » by Josephine Daskam Bacon
- It was a dark day; the clouds hung low, and the dull rumble of the sea came through the dead air.
- Extract from : « The Deemster » by Hall Caine
- All was dark and still inside, and a gust of dead air struck him in the face.
- Extract from : « Boy Scouts in the Northwest » by G. Harvey Ralphson
- Taffy shrunk back, as a draught of the close, dead air struck his nostrils.
- Extract from : « Welsh Fairy Tales » by William Elliott Griffis
- Within the half-hour the night had grown oppressively hot and the dead air was like that of an oven.
- Extract from : « Pirates' Hope » by Francis Lynde
- For the first time since the forest fires had begun to smoulder, the dead air took a sense of motion.
- Extract from : « Despair's Last Journey » by David Christie Murray
- The last crack of a triphammer, peckering at a giant pile of iron down the112 block, dies out on the dead air.
- Extract from : « Europe After 8:15 » by H. L. Mencken, George Jean Nathan and Willard Huntington Wright
- The last crack of a triphammer, peckering at a giant pile of iron down the block, dies out on the dead air.
- Extract from : « Europe After 8:15 » by H. L. Mencken, George Jean Nathan and Willard Huntington Wright
- Again the man sniffed the dead air and, swinging the rifle into the crook of his elbow, continued toward the grub-shack.
- Extract from : « The Promise » by James B. Hendryx
- Was it a mere thrill of the dead air, too slight to be heard, but quivering in every spiritual sense?
- Extract from : « Lilith » by George MacDonald
