In my opinion yes it is. Often suggests something happens quite regularly and rarely suggests it doesn't happen that .....eh often !! ha good question
No, the word 'rarely' is not a noun. The word 'rarely' is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb as not often; seldom.Example: He is rarely late for lunch. (modifies the adjective 'late')A noun is a word for a person, a place or a thing.Example: He rarely speaks of his father. (the adverb 'rarely' modifies the verb 'speaks'; the word 'father' is an noun, a word for a person)The word 'rarely' is the adverb form of the adjective 'rare'.The noun forms of the adjective 'rare' are rareness and rarity.
It appears that he is rarely present and is often absent.
Opposite, against, as opposed to, anti, in the opposite direction
No, it is not a conjunction. It is an adverb, adjective, or preposition, and more rarely a noun or an interjection.
No, the word rarely is a adverb, a word that modifies a verb. For example:He can rarely sit still for long.She rarely eats meat.We rarely go to the movies.
The opposite of often (frequently) is seldom, or rarely.
"Often" and "frequently" are antonyms of "rarely".
often, frequently
The analogy for "seldom" would be "frequently : seldom :: often : rarely." In this analogy, "frequently" is the opposite of "seldom," just as "often" is the opposite of "rarely." "Seldom" means not occurring often or rarely, making "frequently" the appropriate analogy term.
This is a word with different oppositesOne would be alwaysOne would be neverone would be frequently Sometimes is a word between Always and never has no opposite (As far as I know, if I am wrong delete my answer)
rarely, infrequently, seldom, occasionally
The opposite of "kaiser" in the Austrian or German monarchy would be kaiserin but is more often expressed as empress.The term kaiseress was rarely and informally used.
No, often and seldom are not the same. "Often" means something happens frequently or regularly, while "seldom" means something happens rarely or infrequently.
The opposite of "souvent," which means "often" in French, is "rarement," meaning "rarely." While "souvent" indicates a high frequency of occurrence, "rarement" denotes a low frequency. These terms reflect contrasting frequencies in how often something happens.
Some words have no perfect antonyms. "Occasional" is on a scale: Always...frequently...often...occasionally...seldom...infrequently...rarely...never. There is really no opposite. For words like this, the logical answer is to add "Not". "Not occasional" is the opposite of occasional.
Antonyms for rare are common, unexceptional, frequent or (cooked) well done.
Seldom, rarely, infrequently