Usually fair is given as the antonym for foul, as in foul play, foul weather, etc. There are many others, however, as there are several definitions of foul to begin with.
"Unpalatable" or "unsavory" could work. An extreme of distasteful is "foul" or "disgusting."
The antonym of the word 'synonym' is 'antonym'.
The antonym for from is to. Because antonym means opposite.
what is an antonym for veranda?what is an antonym for veranda?
What is the antonym of interdependence. What is the antonym of interdependence.
Foul
fair
ugly, foul depending on context
I believe the answer they're looking for is ... fearHere's how you get there: fear anagrams to fare, which is a homonym of fair, which is an antonym of foul, which is a homonym of fowl, which is an anagram of wolf.Nothing to it. :)---Todd
"Unpalatable" or "unsavory" could work. An extreme of distasteful is "foul" or "disgusting."
foul as in; foul smell: nauseabond, infect, sale foul as in; foul play: jeu deloyal (malveillance)
The antonym of the word 'synonym' is 'antonym'.
An antonym means "opposite". So an antonym for the word synonym is antonym.
Foul (as in foul ball) and fowl (as in a bird)
Foul, meaning: 1. Disgusting, vile 2. "Foul!" at a football match (bad play or something not allowed.)
a foul!
Yes, the word foul is a noun (foul, fouls), a verb(foul, fouls, fouling, fouled), and an adjective (foul, fouler, foulest). Examples:Noun: The referee called a foul.Verb: Take care with the fertilizer, it can foul the pond.Adjective: We don't allow foul language here.