disembark
Overboard
No, the word 'aboard' is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb and a preposition, a word that connects a noun or noun phrase to another word in the sentence.EXAMPLESadverb: We came aboard with a high expectations.preposition: We were greeted graciously when we came aboard the ship.
The opposite of a large ship could be a small boat.
Aboard the ship, the crew planned a mutiny against the captain.
Antonyms for the word serious:LightheartedHalfheartedScatterbrainTrivialSuperficialNegligibleInsincereFalseDishonestDeceptiveUnseriousUnimportantFlippantLightMinor
Antonymns of mean - generous, kind, magnanimous
at home
Embark
aboard.
Off the truck
As soon as the crew were ready, they let the passengers come aboard the ship.
I am ready to come aboard the ship. This ship has an oaken hull. The ship is moored offshore.
Yes, it is one word "aboard" -- as an adverb or preposition, it means "on board" a vehicle such as a bus, train, plane, or ship.
No, the word 'aboard' is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb and a preposition, a word that connects a noun or noun phrase to another word in the sentence.EXAMPLESadverb: We came aboard with a high expectations.preposition: We were greeted graciously when we came aboard the ship.
The ship was leaving soon so people said to hurry up and get aboard
The opposite of a large ship could be a small boat.
Aboard the ship, the crew planned a mutiny against the captain.
If by 'opposite' you mean the word for someone of the opposite sex who has the same state or condition expressed in the word, then the opposite of 'bachelorette' is 'bachelor'.