Meager is an adjective meaning low in amount, strength, or value; poor; very little.
Small in quality or quantity; very thin.
Therefore....
Some antonyms for meager:the food they gave us was meager
lacking in quantity and quality,like meager business
He cooked using a meager amount of spice. The meager supply of food would not last through the winter.
In equipment engineering, its meager test is electrical insulation test. Its testing the grounding of an equipment.
The alternate spelling of the word meager is meagre. This is a less common spelling and is often thought of as an inappropriate alternate.
weak, frail, delicate, shaky, thin, meager.
An antonym (the opposite) of "meager" could be "generous." This would not be the kind of generous meaning "charitable" or "giving freely" but the kind that means "a large amount." Example: "For lunch, the man had only a meager portion and so he was very hungry. When dinner came, he helped himself to a generous amount to make up for it."
the food they gave us was meager
the meager soil of an eroded plain.
lacking in quantity and quality,like meager business
Mount Meager is 2,680m or 8,793ft high
My meager credentials didn't impress the people in personnel. The grazing is meager here, so limit the number of your livestock. The food rations were meager for the soldiers in Okinawa.
He cooked using a meager amount of spice. The meager supply of food would not last through the winter.
A body meager with hunger will result from a meager diet.
Lee Meager was born on 1978-01-18.
The word "meager" is an adjective, used to describe something that is lacking in quantity or quality, often in a negative sense.
The name Meager Mountain was adopted on May 6, 1924 as labelled on a 1923 British Columbia map. In 1966, the volcano was renamed to Mount Meager. According to a BC Geographical Names letter written in March 1983, "the local name, Cathedral, was duplicated elsewhere, so the mountain was renamed Meager after the creek of that name which lies to the south of it". Meager Creek is in turn named after J.B. Meager, who was an owner of timber licences on the creek.