Very few, or so few.
The opposite word for many is less or not so many :)
A kite has 4 sides so it has two pairs of opposite sides.
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The opposite of up is down. So, opposite of the opposite of up is up itself.
The opposite of "to do" is "not to do," so it would be "I did not do my homework."
In many aspects, the opposite could be "civilization" because so many things about it are different from the natural environment. Among anthropologists and sociologists, the word nature is used to represent instinctive responses, having as its opposite factor "nurture" (meaning learned responses).
Well, kindergarten is the first grade anyone takes so the last would be the opposite so college is the opposite.
The opposite of 7 is -7, and the opposite of -7 is 7, so yes.
Think about it. The opposite of west is? East. The opposite of north is? South. So the opposite of WNW is ESE.
Opposite day is actually many days, five to be precise. It is on January 19, March 14, June 15, October 2, and December 31.
Don't is short for "do not" so the opposite would be "do."
Many words that do have opposites are adjectives. An example would be 'big', which refers to size. Its common opposite would be 'small'. But consider a noun such as 'table', which isn't an adjective. What would its opposite be? One could make a case for 'chair', but it'd be a weird argument to make.Even words like the previous example 'big' don't have a single "true" opposite. Is its "true" opposite small? What about tiny, little, or even minuscule?Because there are so many different words in English that have so many different meanings to convey so many different ideas, it is quite difficult to find a "true" opposite (or antonym) for probably any word.