Holding a grudge.
The opposite of -0.16 is 0.16. Therefore, the opposite of the opposite of -0.16 is -0.16 again. In summary, the final answer is -0.16.
The additive opposite is, but not the multiplicative opposite.The additive opposite is, but not the multiplicative opposite.The additive opposite is, but not the multiplicative opposite.The additive opposite is, but not the multiplicative opposite.
The opposite of word several is few.
Couldn't is the opposite of could.
more opposite, most opposite
reward
An antonym is a word that describes the opposite of another. An antonym for blame is forgive.
No, the opposite of provoked is unprovoked. To provoke someone is to anger them, stir them up, but to pardon someone is to forgive them. The opposite of pardoned would be convicted or condemned.
There is no opposite of the action to judge. There is being nonjudgmental, which means deciding not to judge or to characterize.The opposite position to a judge is the defendant (person being judged).The opposite of to judge correctly is to judge incorrectly or misjudge.
That's a confusing question. Forgive means you are no longer mad at someone who did something wrong to you. Not forgiven means you will still be mad at someone who did something wrong to you. Antonym means opposite. The opposite of NOT FORGIVEN is FORGIVEN. Example: My mother forgave me for borrowing her car without asking. However, I was not forgiven for smashing her car, so she is till mad at me!
yes i can forgive you
to forgive = perdonar
He doesn't. He may "technically" be a reverend but that does not mean he preaches the true message of God to love and forgive each other. He does the opposite and his derisiveness is shameful.
to forgive = salách (סלח)
"To forgive" is ignoscere, with the transgression forgiven in the accusative and the person forgiven in the dative. That is, in Latin you forgave something to someone, the opposite of the English usage in which you forgive someone for something.The Vulgate Bible (the 5th-century AD Latin translation of St. Jerome) uses demittere in the same way, as in, for example, demitte nobis debita nostra ("forgive us our debts") in Matthew 6:12. This usage is apparently not classical; in classical sources demittere means "to send down; to put down; to let fall."
To love is to forgive.
As We Forgive was created in 2008.