The opposite reaction of to sink (in liquid) is to float.
However the opposite motion sink (move lower) would have the opposite rise.
Sink
Depending on the right context, sink is already a verb. For example "to sink something" is an action and therefore a verb.
sink sank sunk
The word 'sink' is a noun (sink, sinks) and a verb (sink, sinks, sinking, sank, sunk).The noun 'sink' is a word for a basin fixed to a wall or floor and having a drainpipe and supply of water; a word for a thing.The verb 'sink' means to drop below the surface of something; to descend.
An opposite of the word "to" is from.
The opposite reaction of to sink (in liquid) is to float.However the opposite motion sink (move lower) would have the opposite rise.
Float
sink
Shrink.
The opposite of float is sink. When an object sinks, it moves downward in a fluid or liquid due to gravity until it reaches the bottom.
A synonym for "float" is "drift," while an antonym would be "sink." Conversely, a synonym for "sink" is "descend," and an antonym for it is "rise." These terms describe opposite actions related to buoyancy and movement in water.
Uplift is when things like mountains, hills, and, plateaus are created. Subsidence is the opposite of thins, like when sink holes and valleys are made.
We do not sink into the Earth because the ground beneath us exerts an equal and opposite force, called the normal force, that counteracts gravity. This balance of forces keeps us from sinking further into the Earth's surface.
The future tense of "sink" is "will sink".
The earth's gravitational pull makes objects sink in a liquid, but buoyancy acts in the opposite direction to oppose the gravity. Whether an object sinks or floats depends on which force is bigger. ================================
Uplift is when things like mountains, hills, and, plateaus are created. Subsidence is the opposite of thins, like when sink holes and valleys are made.
The term "mayflower" typically refers to the flowering plant or the historical ship associated with the Pilgrims. Its opposite could conceptually be "wilted flower," representing a state of decline or death as opposed to blooming. Alternatively, if considering the ship, the opposite might be "storm" or "sink," indicating chaos or disaster as opposed to the safe passage represented by the Mayflower.