Define,explicate,express and state
Most words do not have antonyms. 'However' does not.
There is no opposite for insinuate (imply, suggest) except to openly declare or state.However, the opposite action by the recipient would be to infer (assume an implication or insinuation).
The antonym of the word 'synonym' is 'antonym'.
An antonym of the word prude could be the pejorative term "slut" or the non-pejorative term "promiscuous", which both imply loose sexual morals where prude implies strict or conservative sexual morals. However, the former word is considered "taboo" in normal speech. It would be more advisable to use the secondary term promiscuous.
The antonym for from is to. Because antonym means opposite.
An antonym for "epigram" could be "rambling" or "verbose," as epigrams are concise and to the point, while these terms imply being long-winded or overly wordy.
Using "along" to imply location along the length of a structure, the opposite could be either perpendicular (to) or separated (from). The colloquial usage as "came along" (accompanied, present) has no antonym.
Not really. Someone who "allegedly" did something is merely suspected of (or has been accused of) doing something, this phrase does not imply guilt or innocence and is specifically used in instances where the speaker does not wish to (or is not allowed to) imply either. An antonym of the word "proved" would be "disproved" other good antonyms would be "overturned" "refuted" "debunked"
Most words do not have antonyms. 'However' does not.
There is no opposite for insinuate (imply, suggest) except to openly declare or state.However, the opposite action by the recipient would be to infer (assume an implication or insinuation).
Self-confidence or self-assurance would be an antonym to self-deprecation, as they imply a positive and confident self-view rather than putting oneself down.
His demeanor seemed to imply the worst. I would not imply that.
The antonym of the word 'synonym' is 'antonym'.
An antonym of the word prude could be the pejorative term "slut" or the non-pejorative term "promiscuous", which both imply loose sexual morals where prude implies strict or conservative sexual morals. However, the former word is considered "taboo" in normal speech. It would be more advisable to use the secondary term promiscuous.
An antonym means "opposite". So an antonym for the word synonym is antonym.
The correct form is "does it imply", as "imply" is the base form of the verb and is used with the auxiliary verb "does" in interrogative sentences.
Implication is the noun form of "imply."