Word |
Meaning |
Synonyms |
Antonyms |
Usage of Word |
Quack
(noun) |
|
- Fake
- Faker
- Phony
- Cackle
- Fraud
- Cluck
|
- Genuine
- Expert
- Real
- Original
|
There are great quacks and terrible quacks. A decent quack is the sound a duck makes. An awful quack is somebody professing to be a specialist. (You'd be in an ideal situation going by the duck with your infirmity)
Example:
"In English law, to call a restorative expert a "quack" is significant in essence without verification of extraordinary harm".
|
Quadruped
(noun) |
- Four-footed animal
- Adj. CF. biped
|
- Mammal
- Animal
- Beast
- Tetrapod
- Cannibal
|
- Bipedal
- Civic
- Biped
- Secular
|
A squirrel, a zebra, a deer, a wolf, and a wild bear meet in a field. Yes, a catastrophe really taking shape, additionally a group of quadrupeds — creatures that stroll on four feet.
Example:
"I saw neither winged creature, quadruped, reptile, nor bug".
|
Quaff
(verb) |
- Drink with zest
- Drink with relish(zest; hearty enjoyment)
- CF. sip
|
- Imbibe
- Gulp
- Sup
- Sip
- Swill
- Swig
|
|
To quaff is to swallow. You're in a desert; you haven't had water in days; you're evil parched. At that point you discover a desert spring! You hang over and swallow the water.
Example:
"He quaffed half quart after 16 ounces of good Berkshire lager".
|
Quagmire
(noun) |
- Bog
- Marsh
- Soft, wet, boggy land
- Predicament
- Complex or dangerous situation from which it is difficult to free oneself
|
- Fen
- Mire
- Bog
- Swamp
- Quag
- Slough
|
- Desert
- Blessing
- Good
- Due
- Merit
- Success
|
A quagmire is a perilous spot, similar to the sloppy shoreline of a lake.
Example:
"A legitimate quagmire".
|
Quail
(noun) |
- Cower
- Shrink back in fear
- Lose heart
|
- Flinch
- Wince
- Shrink
- Cringe
- Cower
- Tremble
|
|
Littler than the chicken and not also known as the pigeon, quail resemble the regularly neglected center offspring of the ground-abiding flying creature family.
Example:
"The quail lays fifteen or twenty eggs and they are white".
|
Quaint
(adjective) |
- Odd in an old-fashioned way
- Odd
- Old-fashioned
- Picturesque
|
- Odd
- Strange
- Curious
- Queer
- Weird
|
- Ordinary
- Common
- Normal
- Usual
- Average
- Current
- New
|
Quaint means peculiar and abnormal in an out-dated and enchanting way.
Example:
"Quaint nation bungalows".
|
Qualified
(adjecive) |
- Limited
- Restricted
- V. qualify: limit the meaning of
- Modify
|
- Able
- Skilled
- Capable
- Expert
- Trained
- Fit
- Accomplished
|
- Unqualified
- Unfit
- Complete
- Absolute
- General
- Inexpert
|
Qualified means something relies on upon another activity happening.
Example:
"Many people qualified in an exam".
|
Qualify
(verb) |
- Reach a necessary standard
- Limit the meaning of something stated
|
- Modify
- Limit
- Fit
- Diminish
- Authorize
- Enable
- Temper
|
- Disqualify
- Allow
- Abide
- Continue
- Agitate
|
Ensure you know the setting when utilizing the word qualify. In one sense, it intends to be ideal for, to have the goods. In another sense, however, qualify intends to change something marginally, to utmost it or add a condition to it.
Example:
"The preparation important to qualify as a specialist".
|
Qualms
(noun) |
- Uneasy feelings
- Misgivings
- Eneasy fears especially about matters of conscience
- Ex. I have no qualms about giving this assignment to Helen.
|
- Qualm
- Doubts
- Fear
- Hesitation
- Scruple
|
- Willingness
- Disposition
- Approvals
- Readiness
|
A qualm is a sentiment uneasiness, or a feeling that something you're doing isn't right.
Example:
"I don't feel any qualms about applying it to the general population who composed and voted in favor of the tenet".
|
Quandary
(noun) |
- Dilemma
- State of uncertainty
- Ex: She is in a quandary about whether to go.
|
- Dilemma
- Fix
- Problem
- Puzzle
- Mess
- Pickle
- Plight
|
- Solution
- Await
- Boon
- Certitude
- Compose
- Assurance
- Decision
|
How to characterize the word problem? Goodness, this is a significant situation. What to do, what to do? Well. It would appear that this minute itself is a quandary: an extreme circumstance that will be truly difficult to determine.
Example:
"A legitimate quandary".
|
Quarantine
(noun) |
- Isolation of a person, place, or ship to prevent spread of infection
- V: isolate in quarantine
|
- Isolate
- Separate
- Insulate
- Detach
- Solitude
- Confine
|
- Freedom
- Release
- Liberation
|
In the event that you contract something very irresistible, for example, pinkeye, please quarantine yourself so you don't contaminate others with it.
Example:
"I quarantine all new fish for one month".
|
Quarry
(noun) |
- Dig into (to get stone)
- N: mine;
|
- Prey
- Game
- Victim
- Mine
- Butt
- Kill
- Lode
|
|
Both implications of quarry need to do with following something. A creature being chased is called quarry, and when you delve a gap in the earth searching for rocks, both the burrowing and the opening are called quarry also.
Example:
"A gold quarry".
|
Quash
(verb) |
- Crush
- Suppress
- Squash
- Subdue
- Annul
- Ex: Quash a rebellion/the decision of the low court
|
- Suppress
- Cancel
- Void
- Repress
- Abolish
- Kill
|
- Validate
- Create
- Construct
- Formalize
- Permit
- Sanction
|
Quash intends to put down, stop, quench, and it's typically used to discuss thoughts, emotions, or political developments.
Example:
"They moved to quash the arraignment on which he was conveyed to trial".
|
Quay
(noun) |
- Dock
- Wharf
- Pier
- Landing place (for boats)
|
- Wharf
- Dock
- Jetty
- Pier
- Port
|
|
You realize that wharf on the bank of the stream where all the vessels park? It's not a water parking garage. It's known as a quay.
Example:
"The aggregate length of the business quays is around 3800 yds".
|
Queasy
(adjective) |
- Experiencing nausea
- Nauseated
- Easily nauseated
- Squeamish
- Ex: Feel a little queasy
|
- Sick
- Nervous
- Ill
- Tense
- Upset
- Troubled
|
- Healthy
- Comfortable
- Calm
- Well
- Peaceful
- Confident
|
Queasy portrays a sentiment apprehension, uneasiness, or nervousness.
Example:
"The queasy swell of the pontoon".
|
Queer
(adjective) |
- Strange
- Ecentric
- Deviating from the normal
|
- Odd
- Strange
- Curious
- Weird
- Eccentric
|
- Normal
- Well
- Regular
- Familiar
- Usual
|
Queer initially just signified "bizarre," however it's tragically developed into a hostile term for "gay person."
Example:
"She had an queer feeling that they were being viewed".
|
Quell
(verb) |
- Suppress
- Put an end to
- Put down forcibly
- Extinguish
- Quiet
- Ex: "Army Quells Rebellion" in newspaper
- CF. kill
|
- Subdue
- Put down
- Overcome
- Calm
- Compose
|
- Agitate
- Provoke
- Disturb
- Incite
- Win
- Beget
|
Intending to smother or overcome, quell is the thing that you need to do with nerves before a major test and fears before going skydiving.
Example:
"She quelled an inclination to race up the stairs".
|
Quench
(verb) |
- Assuage or satisfy (thrust)
- Slake
- Douse or extinguish
- Put out
- Suppress
|
- Satisfy
- Slake
- Douse
- Sate
- Choke
|
- Ignite
- Kindle
- Start
- Excite
- Fire
- Burn
|
Quench intends to put out, put a conclusion to, or fulfill.
Example:
"Fire fighters pulled on hoses in a frantic offer to quench the flares".
|
Querulous
(adjective) |
- Given to complaining
- Complaining
- Fretful
- Whining
|
- Peevish
- Testy
- Grumpy
- Captious
- Carping
- Crabby
|
- Genial
- Happy
- Nice
- Pleasant
- Amiable
|
Querulous signifies "tending to grumble" or, all the more straightforwardly put, "whiny".
Example:
"She got to be querulous and requesting".
|
Query
(noun) |
|
- Question
- Ask
- Examine
- Doubt
- Challenge
|
- Answer
- Reply
- Conviction
- Retort
- Abide
|
An query is an inquiry, or the quest for a bit of data.
Example:
"Numerous individuals queried whether any mischief had been finished".
|
Queue
(noun) |
- Line (of waiting people or vehicles)
|
- Line
- Row
- File
- Chain
- Range
|
- Disarrange
- Disjoint
- Disorganization
|
A queue is a line of things, generally individuals. On the off chance that you go to the store on a major deal day, there will likely be a long line at the registration.
Example:
"Arrange everything in a queue".
|
Quibble
(noun) |
- Minor objection or complaint
- V: raise minor objections
- Carp
- Cavil
|
- Cavil
- Fence
- Bicker
- Dispute
- Shuffle
- Shift
|
- Agree
- Accept
- Approval
- Concur
- Accost
|
A quibble is a little contention or battle. As a verb, it intends to pick a smaller than expected battle about something that doesn't generally make a difference.
Example:
"The main quibble about this book is the cost".
|
Quicksilver
(noun) |
|
- Mercurial
- Fickle
- Mercury
- Arrow
- Moon
- Dart
|
|
Use the noun quicksilver when you require a more graceful approach to discuss the component known as mercury.
Example:
"Her quicksilver mind".
|
Quiescent
(adjective) |
- Dormant
- Temporarily inactive
- At rest
- N. quiescence
|
- Quiet
- Still
- Dormant
- Calm
- Latent
|
- Active
- Quick
- Working
- Alert
- Alive
|
The adjective quiescent signifies "being calm and still," like the quiet minutes lying in a loft on a delightful summer Sunday.
Example:
"Strikes were going by gatherings of laborers who had already been quiescent".
|
Quietude
(noun) |
|
- Peace
- Quite
- Repose
- Silence
- Rest
|
- Noise
- Fury
- Music
- Racket
- Agitation
|
Quietude implies a condition of peace and calm. It runs as an inseparable unit with isolation.
Example:
"It highlights her quietude and insightful lack of involvement".
|