Red5 Webmaster, UsingEnglish.com Staff member Joined Nov 13, 2002 Member Type Interested in Language Native Language British English Home Country England Current Location England Nov 17, 2002 #2 Hello there EJ, First, check out our glossary page on antonyms, which contains some examples: https://www.usingenglish.com/glossary/antonym.html I had a quick search for you, and came up with a couple of online dictionaries that give antonyms: http://www.synonym.com/ http://vancouver-webpages.com/wordnet/ http://thesaurus.reference.com/ And if you want to look for more dictionaries that I have missed out, here is a great place to find them: http://www.yourdictionary.com/diction1.html I hope these help, and if you need any further help or advice, please feel free to ask! Regards, Last edited: Oct 31, 2005
Hello there EJ, First, check out our glossary page on antonyms, which contains some examples: https://www.usingenglish.com/glossary/antonym.html I had a quick search for you, and came up with a couple of online dictionaries that give antonyms: http://www.synonym.com/ http://vancouver-webpages.com/wordnet/ http://thesaurus.reference.com/ And if you want to look for more dictionaries that I have missed out, here is a great place to find them: http://www.yourdictionary.com/diction1.html I hope these help, and if you need any further help or advice, please feel free to ask! Regards,
R RonBee Moderator Joined Feb 9, 2003 Member Type Other Native Language American English Home Country United States Current Location United States Sep 10, 2003 #3 Red5 said: I had a quick search for you Click to expand... Is that BE? (In AE we would say I did a quick search.)
Red5 said: I had a quick search for you Click to expand... Is that BE? (In AE we would say I did a quick search.)
T Tdol No Longer With Us (RIP) Staff member Joined Nov 13, 2002 Native Language British English Home Country UK Current Location Japan Sep 10, 2003 #4 We could use both. Red is correct in BE, implying that he did more than one search. ;-)
R RonBee Moderator Joined Feb 9, 2003 Member Type Other Native Language American English Home Country United States Current Location United States Sep 11, 2003 #5 tdol said: We could use both. Red is correct in BE, implying that he did more than one search. ;-) Click to expand... Thanks for the translation. :wink:
tdol said: We could use both. Red is correct in BE, implying that he did more than one search. ;-) Click to expand... Thanks for the translation. :wink:
A AaronAgassi New member Joined Sep 18, 2005 Sep 18, 2005 #6 http://www.synonym.com http://www.rhymezone.com/
S SAMMM New member Joined Sep 19, 2007 Member Type Student or Learner Sep 19, 2007 #7 i've looked all over the web to try and find an anotonym for "prelude" can anyone help me out?
Red5 Webmaster, UsingEnglish.com Staff member Joined Nov 13, 2002 Member Type Interested in Language Native Language British English Home Country England Current Location England Sep 19, 2007 #8 prelude n Definition: beginning of event Antonyms: conclusion, ending, epilogue, postlude, postscript From: prelude: Definition, Synonyms and Much More from Answers.com Click to expand... Hope that helps. ;-)
prelude n Definition: beginning of event Antonyms: conclusion, ending, epilogue, postlude, postscript From: prelude: Definition, Synonyms and Much More from Answers.com Click to expand... Hope that helps. ;-)