precede
decent tasteful polite
cave in, depress, decline, recede
Not exactly. This is a case of an "antonym of a synonym" that is not close enough, although you will see it appear in a thesaurus.The word increase means to become larger in value, size, amount, or use. It can be an antonym of the words "diminish" and "decline" which are synonyms for recede in some cases.The word recede has a positional connotation, meaning to retreat, move back or move away. More apt antonyms (opposites) would be to advance (move forward) or spread.
brighten, enhance, intensify
The antonym of exceed should be receed because anything such as deceed has not yet made to the dictionary The antonym of "exceed" can't be "receed", since that is not a word. It is not "recede" either. There is no antonym listed for "exceed".
decent tasteful polite
cave in, depress, decline, recede
Not exactly. This is a case of an "antonym of a synonym" that is not close enough, although you will see it appear in a thesaurus.The word increase means to become larger in value, size, amount, or use. It can be an antonym of the words "diminish" and "decline" which are synonyms for recede in some cases.The word recede has a positional connotation, meaning to retreat, move back or move away. More apt antonyms (opposites) would be to advance (move forward) or spread.
brighten, enhance, intensify
he had recede hair.
Receded is the past tense of recede.
The tide will begin to recede shortly.
I am waiting for the tide to recede.
Recede means to move away; if it's recede into the background, you could use "fade."
The Vicar's hair line is beginning to recede.
The antonym of exceed should be receed because anything such as deceed has not yet made to the dictionary The antonym of "exceed" can't be "receed", since that is not a word. It is not "recede" either. There is no antonym listed for "exceed".
Recede means to pull back or to withdraw