Opponent could mean rival, adversary, challenger, and to some extent, enemy.
strong, weak, skilled, unskilled
to oppose
"She is a redoubtable opponent; you must respect and fear her at all times."
The word adversary may be used both as a noun, as in:His adversary tried every trick to prevent him from winning the race.and as an adjective, as in:Divorce is, by its own nature, an adversaryprocedure.As a noun, it is a synonym of opponent, enemy, contender, foe.As an adjective, it can be a synonym of opposing, antagonistic, enemy (adj.) hostile, antipathetic, inimical, negative, unfriendly, unsympathetic.As for the connotation of this word, both as a noun and as an adjective, I would say that it tends to be used by those who are, or try to appear, impartial in a dispute. Like many high-register words, it has much less emotional impact than words such as "enemy", "opponent", "foe" and "hostile".
You have spelled it correctly: opponent.
No, but edgy is. Like avant gard, or reckless.It depends on how the word is used.Please see the examples below:We walked near the edge of the cliff. (edge = noun)He needed one more edge piece to complete the puzzle. (edge = adjective)He tried to edge out his opponent. (edge = verb)She's on the edge of a nervous breakdown. (noun)
No, it is a verb or a noun (to go around, to surround; a round shape). The adjective form is circular.
"She is a redoubtable opponent; you must respect and fear her at all times."
The other team was the opponent. In the tennis match, Ruby was Daisy's opponent. My opponent was scary. The opponent was prepared.
an opponent is a rival
The word more can be a noun, adjective, or adverb. It also forms comparative adjectives and adverbs. He wants more. (noun) There are more fish to be caught. (adjective) The brothers talk more than their sisters. (adverb) He is more truthful than his opponent. The new machines do the job more easily.
The word more can be a noun, adjective, or adverb. It also forms comparative adjectives and adverbs. He wants more. (noun) There are more fish to be caught. (adjective) The brothers talk more than their sisters. (adverb) He is more truthful than his opponent. The new machines do the job more easily.
An imaginary opponent.
The Opponent was created in 2000.
The word adversary may be used both as a noun, as in:His adversary tried every trick to prevent him from winning the race.and as an adjective, as in:Divorce is, by its own nature, an adversaryprocedure.As a noun, it is a synonym of opponent, enemy, contender, foe.As an adjective, it can be a synonym of opposing, antagonistic, enemy (adj.) hostile, antipathetic, inimical, negative, unfriendly, unsympathetic.As for the connotation of this word, both as a noun and as an adjective, I would say that it tends to be used by those who are, or try to appear, impartial in a dispute. Like many high-register words, it has much less emotional impact than words such as "enemy", "opponent", "foe" and "hostile".
you outwit your opponent innetball by
i was playin a opponent in checkers
The duration of The Opponent is 1.5 hours.
England was our opponent.