Advertisement
Advertisement
anti
1[an-tahy, an-tee]
noun
plural
antisa person who is opposed to a particular practice, party, policy, action, etc.
anti-
2a prefix meaning “against,” “opposite of,” “antiparticle of,” used in the formation of compound words (anticline ); used freely in combination with elements of any origin (antibody; antifreeze; antiknock; antilepton ).
anti
1/ ˈæntɪ /
adjective
opposed to a party, policy, attitude, etc
he won't join because he is rather anti
noun
an opponent of a party, policy, etc
anti-
2prefix
against; opposing
anticlerical
antisocial
opposite to
anticlimax
antimere
rival; false
antipope
counteracting, inhibiting, or neutralizing
antifreeze
antihistamine
designating the antiparticle of the particle specified
antineutron
anti–
A prefix whose basic meaning is “against.” It is used to form adjectives that mean “counteracting” (such as antiseptic, preventing infection). It is also used to form nouns referring to substances that counteract other substances (such as antihistamine, a substance counteracting histamine), and nouns meaning “something that displays opposite, reverse, or inverse characteristics of something else” (such as anticyclone, a storm that circulates in the opposite direction from a cyclone). Before a vowel it becomes ant–, as in antacid.
Sensitive Note
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of anti1
Example Sentences
Among the anti immigration crowd there were signs reading "stop the boats'"and "enough is enough", while counter demonstrators chanted "refugees are welcome here".
"He was anti everything to do with it," one local told the Sydney Morning Herald.
It also says "We strongly reject the notion – levelled from different sides of this conflict – that we are pro or anti any position".
Critics like Democratic Rep. Daniel Goldman described the remark as “blatant and vile anti‑Semitism.”
In a way, “Oh, Mary!” is the anti-“Hamilton.”
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse