List of antonyms from "embonpoint" to antonyms from "emceeing"
Discover our 228 antonyms available for the terms "embraces, embracing, embrangle, embroil, emcee, embrace" and many more. Click on one of the words below and go directly to the antonyms associated with it.
- Embonpoint (5 antonyms)
- Embrace (16 antonyms)
- Embraced (16 antonyms)
- Embracement (1 antonym)
- Embraces (16 antonyms)
- Embracing (16 antonyms)
- Embracings (12 antonyms)
- Embracive (9 antonyms)
- Embrangle (2 antonyms)
- Embrasure (6 antonyms)
- Embroider (14 antonyms)
- Embroidered (14 antonyms)
- Embroiderings (9 antonyms)
- Embroil (17 antonyms)
- Embroiled (17 antonyms)
- Embroilings (12 antonyms)
- Embroilment (4 antonyms)
- Embryology (1 antonym)
- Embryonic (4 antonyms)
- Embus (4 antonyms)
- Embuses (4 antonyms)
- Emcee (11 antonyms)
- Emceed (9 antonyms)
- Emceeing (9 antonyms)
Definition of the day : « embroider »
- verb add fancy stitching, adornment
- verb exaggerate information
- Maidens of the first families were selected to embroider the sacred peplus.
- Extract from : « Philothea » by Lydia Maria Child
- I learnt to sing rondeaux and to embroider handkerchiefs for my mother.
- Extract from : « My Double Life » by Sarah Bernhardt
- They agreed to embroider a pair of slippers for her—to do the work themselves.
- Extract from : « Mark Twain, A Biography, 1835-1910, Complete » by Albert Bigelow Paine
- The girls used to sit about indoors and embroider—oh, everlastingly!
- Extract from : « Four Days » by Hetty Hemenway
- You see at home, when I get my work done, I knit or crochet or embroider.
- Extract from : « Maw's Vacation » by Emerson Hough
- We'll eat our luncheon, and then you can embroider and I'll read to you some more.
- Extract from : « Cricket at the Seashore » by Elizabeth Westyn Timlow
- I wish you would, dear, and embroider an altar cloth while you are here.
- Extract from : « Jewel » by Clara Louise Burnham
- She could crochet and she could embroider, so these helped a bit.
- Extract from : « Fireside Stories for Girls in Their Teens » by Margaret White Eggleston
- Others will embroider scarfs for you; 'tis I, the servant, who will care for them.
- Extract from : « Notre-Dame de Paris » by Victor Hugo
- The most beautiful is to embroider in silk or mercerized cotton.
- Extract from : « Woodland Tales » by Ernest Seton-Thompson
