Awake.
The prefix for contrary is "anti-".
Contrary to what she was told, he did not steal anything. What she did was contrary to what she had been taught by her parents.
Generally, the phrase used in American English is "On the contrary." However, that was not your question was, "Does to the contrary make sense?" The answer to your question is, yes it does make sense. While, On the contrary is the preferred usage, still to the contrary makes sense. On the other hand, even the French au contraire makes sense!
contrairement
"asleep" would be correct grammar, not "sleep"
strong
It is occupied or full.
No. That would be contrary to the concept of the separation of church and state.
Relative: parent/child, contrary: vegan/carnivore Relative: teacher/student, contrary: awake/asleep Relative: husband/wife, privative: blind/sighted Relative: superior/inferior, contrary: hot/cold Relative: employer/employee, privative: deaf/hearing
Mary's contrary behavior may have been influenced by a desire for independence, a need to assert herself, or simply her personality. It's important to consider the context and circumstances in which she exhibited contrary behavior to better understand her reasons.
It is a good idea. Because, Contrary to popular belief, religion is the root of civilization.
"asleep" is a verb
Fall asleep is future tense Ex. I am going to fall asleep. Fell asleep is past tense Ex. I fell asleep.
Asleep is a predicate nominative.
It can be. Asleep can be an adjective or adverb.
contrary
No, animal body parts do not fall asleep in the same way that human body parts do. The phenomenon of "falling asleep" typically refers to the temporary loss of sensation or tingling that humans experience when a nerve is compressed. While animals may experience similar sensations if a nerve is compressed, they do not have the same concept of falling asleep as humans do.