(apposite means appropriate, fitting, or pertinent) We learned that his remark about receiving poor service was an apposite one. The senator's apposite characterization as a philanderer was well deserved.
Apposite is a word, but you probably mean opposite. The opposite of doubt is certainty. Doubt and certainty are antonyms.
As a metaphor is a a figure of speech which is applied to something to which it is not strictly applicable, the opposite would be the concept of 'le mot juste' - the right word, the exact word, or maybe 'apposite'
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By balancing apposite poles
Yes. But it is not related to opposite (completely different). It is more closely related to the grammar term appositive (a restatement designed to clarify, e.g. Her sister Gloria). The term is used infrequently because of its similarity to the more popular term (opposite).It means apt, appropriate, or pertinent.Example: His speech was an apposite closing to his campaign.
Dislike is a verb and it is apposite of "Like". it simply means "To not like someone or Something". For example:" Why does he dislike vegetarian food so much?".
The information she provided was not pertinent to the discussion at hand.
It means suitable, appropriate, or well-adapted for the situation. So the teacher's analogy was very pertinent for the situation or circumstance.
The Tagalog word for wild is "ma-gubat" or "salbahe."
An appositive is something in a sentence next to something else referring to the same thing, essentially. An example sentence is: If a sentence has an appositive, it should be easy to understand who or what it is about.
'Salvaje' is wild in Spanish.