Technically, it's impossible for any noun to have an antonym.
For example, what's the antonym of electricity? Nebraska? ice cream?
Perhaps not exactly what you were looking for though :(
"Palabra" is the Spanish word for "Word".
The Latin word for sustainability is the word sostenibilita. The Spanish word for this word is sostenibilidad and the German word is nachhaltigkeit.
The Latin for the word process is the word a liquid. The Spanish word for process is proceso and the German word is prozess.
Modo is the Kikuyu word for the English word person.
Moge is the Kikuyu word for the English word clever.
ordinary
separate
THEY HAVE BOTH
The word 'porcelain' is a noun, a word for a white, translucent, ceramic; a word for things made from this ceramic; a word for a substance; a word for a thing.
I hope that the porcelain vase is not very expensive.
No, the noun 'porcelain' is a concrete noun, a word for a physical substance.
Here are 3 examples:Sometimes porcelain can be expensive.Be careful with that porcelain vase.Thank you for the beautiful porcelain plate.
The word porcelain actually comes from the French word "porcelain." During the 16th century, the word porcelain became more common.
There is no abstract form for the noun 'porcelain'; a word for a substance and objects made from that substance; a physical thing and things.
If you are referring the first word "china" to porcelain, China was the birthplace of making porcelain. That's why porcelain is informally be referred to as "china" or "fine china" in some English-speaking countries
"Porcelain-maker" and "porcelain-seller" are English equivalents of the French word porcelainier. The masculine singular noun also translates as "person who makes or sells porcelain" in English. The pronunciation will be "por-sle-nyer" in Alsatian and Cevenol French.
Porcelain Black goes by Porcelain Black.