Rise
This depends on the definition of drop to which you are referring. Drop can mean let go of something, making it fall, in which case the opposite is to pick it up. Things can also drop independently, IE a drop in temperature, in which case the opposite is rise.
The opposite of dropped (transitive) is lifted or raised.
The opposite of dropped (intransitive) is rose or ascended.
The opposite of "pick up" is "drop off."
The opposite of climb (ascend) would be descend. However, for some type of increase (climb, rise), the opposite would be drop or fall.
Rise means to go up, and fall means to go down. falldownfalldecline, decrease, drop, fall, slump, worsening
The antonym (opposite) of the word "climax" would probably be "lull," "dip," or "drop" (or pretty much any term describing uninterest/boredom).
Not really, no. Drop can mean a 'down', but doesn't really make sense in that way without another word supporting it e.g. 'My heart dropped' (I think this may be where your confusion lies; phrases like this). By itself, it just means to drop something, e.g. 'I dropped my wallet'. The word 'drop' by itself by is not an antonym. An example of an antonym to hope would be doom or despair.
The opposite of drop is throw.
The opposite of "pick up" is "drop off."
Pick
its hold
drop take down
drop, lower (verb), put down
The opposite of climb (ascend) would be descend. However, for some type of increase (climb, rise), the opposite would be drop or fall.
A drop point blade has a convex curve of the back, the opposite side of the cutting edge, towards the point.
no, it would just be proved. the "im-" prefix already makes it the opposite. To reverse the meaning, just drop the prefix. It like with the word "immature", which is the opposite of "mature".
Paralysis of cranial nerve ten causes uvula palsy. Uvula deviates to the opposite side.
Just the opposite. It will cause the acceleration to drop by 50%.
The opposite of deciduous is evergreen. Deciduous refers to trees that drop their leaves during the winter. Evergreen trees have the same leaves all year long. Learnt that in first grade :p