English Synonyms and Antonyms - LightNovelsOnl.com
You're reading novel online at LightNovelsOnl.com. Please use the follow button to get notifications about your favorite novels and its latest chapters so you can come back anytime and won't miss anything.
contemn, dishonor, forget, neglect, profane, despise, disregard, ignore, overlook, violate.
Prepositions:
We celebrate the day _with_ appropriate ceremonies; the victory was celebrated _by_ the people, _with_ rejoicing.
CENTER.
Synonyms:
middle, midst.
We speak of the _center_ of a circle, the _middle_ of a room, the _middle_ of the street, the _midst_ of a forest. The _center_ is equally distant from every point of the circ.u.mference of a circle, or from the opposite boundaries on each axis of a parallelogram, etc.; the _middle_ is more general and less definite. The _center_ is a point; the _middle_ may be a line or a s.p.a.ce. We say _at_ the _center_; _in_ the _middle_.
_Midst_ commonly implies a group or mult.i.tude of surrounding objects.
Compare synonyms for AMID.
Antonyms:
bound, boundary, circ.u.mference, perimeter, rim.
CHAGRIN.
Synonyms:
confusion, discomposure, humiliation, shame, disappointment, dismay, mortification, vexation.
_Chagrin_ unites _disappointment_ with some degree of _humiliation_. A rainy day may bring _disappointment_; needless failure in some enterprise brings _chagrin_. _Shame_ involves the consciousness of fault, guilt, or impropriety; _chagrin_ of failure of judgment, or harm to reputation. A consciousness that one has displayed his own ignorance will cause him _mortification_, however worthy his intent; if there was a design to deceive, the exposure will cover him with _shame_.
Antonyms:
delight, exultation, glory, rejoicing, triumph.
Prepositions:
He felt deep chagrin _at_ (_because of_, _on account of_) failure.
CHANGE, _v._
Synonyms:
alter, exchange, s.h.i.+ft, trans.m.u.te, commute, metamorphose, subst.i.tute, turn, convert, modify, transfigure, vary, diversify, qualify, transform, veer.
To _change_ is distinctively to make a thing other than it has been, in some respect at least; to _exchange_ to put or take something else in its place; to _alter_ is ordinarily to _change_ partially, to make different in one or more particulars. To _exchange_ is often to transfer owners.h.i.+p; as, to _exchange_ city for country property. _Change_ is often used in the sense of _exchange_; as, to _change_ horses. To _trans.m.u.te_ is to _change_ the qualities while the substance remains the same; as, to _trans.m.u.te_ the baser metals into gold. To _transform_ is to _change_ form or appearance, with or without deeper and more essential change; it is less absolute than _trans.m.u.te_, tho sometimes used for that word, and is often used in a spiritual sense as _trans.m.u.te_ could not be; "Be ye _transformed_ by the renewing of your mind," _Rom._ xii, 2. _Transfigure_ is, as in its Scriptural use, to change in an exalted and glorious spiritual way; "Jesus ... was _transfigured_ before them, and his face did s.h.i.+ne as the sun, and his raiment was white as the light," _Matt._ xvii, 1, 2. To _metamorphose_ is to make some remarkable change, ordinarily in external qualities, but often in structure, use, or chemical const.i.tution, as of a caterpillar into a b.u.t.terfly, of the stamens of a plant into petals, or of the crystalline structure of rocks, hence called "metamorphic rocks," as when a limestone is _metamorphosed_ into a marble. To _vary_ is to _change_ from time to time, often capriciously. To _commute_ is to put something easier, lighter, milder, or in some way more favorable in place of that which is _commuted_; as, to _commute_ capital punishment to imprisonment for life; to _commute_ daily fares on a railway to a monthly payment. To _convert_ (L. _con_, with, and _verto_, turn) is to primarily _turn_ about, and signifies to _change_ in form, character, use, etc., through a wide range of relations; iron is _converted_ into steel, joy into grief, a sinner into a saint. To _turn_ is a popular word for _change_ in any sense short of the meaning of _exchange_, being often equivalent to _alter_, _convert_, _transform_, _trans.m.u.te_, etc.
We _modify_ or _qualify_ a statement which might seem too strong; we _modify_ it by some limitation, _qualify_ it by some addition.
Antonyms:
abide, continue, hold, persist, retain, bide, endure, keep, remain, stay.
Prepositions:
To change a home toilet _for_ a street dress; to change _from_ a caterpillar _to_ or _into_ a b.u.t.terfly; to change clothes _with_ a beggar.
CHANGE, _n._
Synonyms:
alteration, mutation, renewing, trans.m.u.tation, conversion, novelty, revolution, variation, diversity, regeneration, transformation, variety, innovation, renewal, transition, vicissitude.
A _change_ is a pa.s.sing from one state or form to another, any act or process by which a thing becomes unlike what it was before, or the unlikeness so produced; we say a _change_ was taking place, or the _change_ that had taken place was manifest. _Mutation_ is a more formal word for _change_, often suggesting repeated or continual _change_; as, the _mutations_ of fortune. _Novelty_ is a _change_ to what is new, or the newness of that to which a change is made; as, he was perpetually desirous of _novelty_. _Revolution_ is specifically and most commonly a _change_ of government. _Variation_ is a partial _change_ in form, qualities, etc., but especially in position or action; as, the _variation_ of the magnetic needle or of the pulse. _Variety_ is a succession of _changes_ or an intermixture of different things, and is always thought of as agreeable. _Vicissitude_ is sharp, sudden, or violent _change_, always thought of as surprising and often as disturbing or distressing; as, the _vicissitudes_ of politics.
_Transition_ is _change_ by pa.s.sing from one place or state to another, especially in a natural, regular, or orderly way; as, the _transition_ from spring to summer, or from youth to manhood. An _innovation_ is a _change_ that breaks in upon an established order or custom; as, an _innovation_ in religion or politics. For the distinctions between the other words compare the synonyms for CHANGE, _v._ In the religious sense _regeneration_ is the vital _renewing_ of the soul by the power of the divine Spirit; _conversion_ is the conscious and manifest _change_ from evil to good, or from a lower to a higher spiritual state; as, in _Luke_ xxii, 32, "when thou art _converted_, strengthen thy brethren." In popular use _conversion_ is the most common word to express the idea of _regeneration_.
Antonyms:
constancy, fixedness, invariability, steadiness, continuance, fixity, permanence, unchangeableness, firmness, ident.i.ty, persistence, uniformity.
Prepositions:
We have made a change _for_ the better; the change _from_ winter to spring; the change _of_ a liquid _to_ or _into_ a gas; a change _in_ quality; a change _by_ absorption or oxidation.
CHARACTER.
Synonyms:
const.i.tution, genius, personality, reputation, temper, disposition, nature, record, spirit, temperament.
_Character_ is what one is; _reputation_, what he is thought to be; his _record_ is the total of his known action or inaction. As a rule, a man's _record_ will substantially express his _character_; his _reputation_ may be higher or lower than his _character_ or _record_ will justify. _Repute_ is a somewhat formal word, with the same general sense as _reputation_. One's _nature_ includes all his original endowments or propensities; _character_ includes both natural and acquired traits. We speak of one's physical _const.i.tution_ as strong or weak, etc., and figuratively, always with the adjective, of his mental or moral _const.i.tution_. Compare CHARACTERISTIC.