Word |
Meaning |
Synonyms |
Antonyms |
Usage of Word |
Rabble
(noun) |
|
- Mosses
- Mob
- Crowd
- Populace
- Riffraff
- Horde
- Throng
|
- Elite
- Hearth
- Gentry
- Gentlefolk
|
Customary or basic individuals who don't have a considerable measure of cash, force, or societal Position.
Example:
“He was met by a rabble of uproarious, irate young people”.
|
Rabid
(adjective) |
- Of or suffering rabies
- Like a fanatic
- Extremely zealous
- Furious
- Cf. rabies: hydrophobia
|
- Frenzied
- Wild
- Mad
- Frantic
- Violent
|
- Happy
- Peaceful
- Calm
- Kind
- Cute
|
Odds are that if the tail-wagging canine that just
showed up on your doorstep is additionally froth
ing at the mouth and biting on your appreciated
mat, it's rabid and you ought to step back
gradually; no petting for this irresistible pup.
Example:
“Her mom was nibbled by a rabid canine”.
|
Rabies
(noun) |
- Disease passed on by the bite of an infected animal (causing madness and death)
|
- Madness
- Fury
- Rage
- Mania
- Rabidity
|
|
An intense and regularly deadly illness that
influences creatures, (for example, mutts) and
that can be passed on to individuals if a
contaminated creature nibbles them.
Example:
“We're treating her for rabies, in the event
that something goes wrong”.
|
Raconteur
(noun) |
- Story-teller
- One who tells stories with wit and skill
|
- Narrator
- Relator
- Novelist
- Storyteller
- Talker
|
|
Raconteurs are skilled storytellers, ready to turn diverting stories from ordinary life.
Example:
“A brilliant raconteur”.
|
Raffle
(noun) |
- Lottery
- V: award as a prize in a raffle
- Ex. raffle off a new car
|
- Lottery
- Gamble
- Tombola
- Lotto
- Pool
|
|
To give (something) as a prize in a raffle.
Example:
“A raffle paper”.
|
Rag
(noun) |
- Scrap of cloth
- Adj. ragged: old and torn
- Seeming unfinished and imperfect
- Ex. ragged debut/performance
|
- Tease
- Mock
- Twit
- Rib
- Ride
- Jeer
|
|
To describe something is in bad condition.
Example:
“He wiped his hands on a sleek rag”.
|
Ragamuffin
(noun) |
- Dirty child in torn clothes
- Person wearing tattered clothes
|
- Tramp
- Beggar
- Urchin
- Orphan
- Gamin
|
|
Utilize the word ragamuffin to tenderly tease
your companion who appears late to informal
breakfast with untidy hair, dark circles under
her eyes, and her shirt on in reverse.
Example:
“Yes, she makes a normal pet of the little
ragamuffin - it's consummately sickening”.
|
Rail
(noun) |
- Complain bitterly
- Scold
- Rant
- Ex. the weaker railing against injustices
|
- Track
- Scold
- Berate
- Line
- Blast
- Censure
|
- Evaluate
- Praise
- Rejoice
- Compliment
|
The verb rail intends to censure seriously. When you rail
against expanded charges at a town meeting, you talk
transparently and uproariously about how wrong the
expansion is and bring up the issues it will bring about.
Example:
“Perishables were railed into Manhattan”.
|
Raiment
(noun) |
- Clothing
- Garments
- Ex. I have no raiment fit to wear
|
- Garb
- Attire
- Dress
- Garment
- Costume
|
- Strip
- Undress
- Discase
- Abolish
- Bareness
|
Raiment is an antiquated word for garments, especially favor apparel, similar to women who dependably wore their best clothing when approaching companions.
Example:
“Women dressed in raiment embellished with gems”.
|
Rake
(noun) |
- Immoral or dissolute person
|
- Lecher
- Comb
- Pitch
- Scour
- Search
- Dig
|
- Apportion
- Browse
- Dip
- Drag
- Fall
- Downgrade
|
On the off chance that it's fall and the yard is secured with leaves, you'll need to get out the rake, a since quite a while ago took care of hardware with a column of tines.
Example:
“I saw some photos of Granddad on an old rake that”.
|
Rakish
(adjective) |
- Jaunty
- Stylish
- Sporty
- Morally corrupt
- Dissolute
- Ex. He wore his hat at a rakish and jaunty angle
|
- Dashing
- Jaunty
- Natty
- Chic
- Dapper
- Stylish
|
- Moral
- Clean
- Conventional
- Prude
|
Women, the rakish you met the previous evening with the smooth move moves, easily practiced lines, and your number recorded as "Goddess #14" in his telephone is fine for a tease, yet likely isn't meet-the-guardians material.
Example:
“She had a rakish, nonchalant look”.
|
Rally
(verb) |
- Come or bring together
- Call up or summon (forces, vital powers, etc.)
- Revive or recuperate (after illness or difficulty)
- N: act of rallying
- Mass gathering
|
- Muster
- Recover
- Assemble
- Gather
- Summon
- Meet
|
- Demobilize
- Decay
- Descent
- Dispel
- Inactivate
|
Utilize the verb rally to portray that last push to complete a troublesome something. When you hit that last mile in the race and are so drained you need to stop, that is the point at which you rally, finding the quality to quit slacking.
Example:
“De Montfort's troops rallied and drove back the ruler's”.
|
Ram
(noun) |
- Male sheep
- V. strike or drive against with a heavy impact
|
- Thrust
- Force
- Pack
- Stuff
- Press
|
|
Example:
“He rammed his stick into the ground”.
|
Ramble
(verb)
(noun) |
- Wander aimlessly (physically or mentally)
- Digress
|
- Wander
- Roam
- Stray
- Drift
- Tour
|
- Stay
- Decide
- Fall
- Flood
- Gush
|
You ramble when you're talking or you're strolling continues forever and on. Also, on. You're in no rush to make a point or get to your destination — if there is one by any stretch of the imagination.
Example:
“I invested the vast majority of my extra energy rambling and climbing”.
|
Ramification
(noun) |
- Branching out
- Subdivision
- One branch of a system
- One of the results following from an action or decision
|
- Branch
- Fork
- Effect
- Leg
- Upshot
- Deviation
|
|
A ramification is an unplanned outcome that confuses things.
Example:
“A coronary angiogram demonstrated ramification of the right coronary supply route near the ostium”.
|
Ramify
(verb) |
- Branch out
- Divide into branches or subdivisions
|
- Branch
- Fork
- Furcate
- Sub divide
- Spread
- Split
|
- Declassify
- Indiscriminate
|
The verb ramify portrays something that branches off or spreads, similar to the new tram lines.
Example:
“A ramified genealogical system”.
|
Ramp
(noun) |
- Slope
- Inclined plane or roadway (connecting two levels)
|
- Incline
- Grade
- Slope
- Slant
- Bank
|
|
A slanting surface associating two levels; slant.
Example:
“The organization has moved into new quarters with a specific end goal to ramp up production”.
|
Rampant
(adjective) |
- Growing or spreading uncontrollably
- Growing in profusion
- Unrestrained
- Ex. rampant lawlessness/weed
|
- Wild
- Rank
- Rearing
- Unchecked
- Violent
|
- Controlled
- Limited
- Checked
- Hindered
- Scarce
|
Rampant means wild, crazy, to be up on your rear legs thundering at the world.
Example:
“Political viciousness was rampant”.
|
Rampart
(noun) |
|
- Barrier
- Wall
- Bastion
- Fence
- Dike
- Guard
|
|
If you are building a sand stronghold and need it to be additional sensible, bear in mind the rampart.
Example:
“A stronghold with ramparts and a canal”.
|
Ramshackle
(adjective) |
- (Of a building or vehicle) poorly constructed
- Rickety
- Falling apart
|
- Shaky
- Shabby
- Flimsy
- Unstable
- Decrepit
|
- Undamaged
- Stable
- Robust
- Adjust
|
Is your home in horrendous condition? Does the rooftop spill? Is it half tumbling down? Congrats! It's ramshackle.
Example:
“A ramshackle bungalow”.
|
Rancid
(adjective) |
- Having the odor of stale or decomposing fat
- Rank
|
- Putrid
- Rank
- Bad
- Strong
- Sour
|
- Fresh
- Sweet
- Alive
- Alluring
|
Rancid means acrid, spoiled, and frightful and alludes most particularly to the sharp awful stench of decaying oils or fats.
Example:
“Rancid meat”.
|
Rancor
(noun) |
- Long-lasting hatred
- Bitterness
- Ex. negotiation without rancor
- Adj.
rancorous
|
- Bitterness
- Hatred
- Spite
- Gall
- Enmity
|
- Kindness
- Amity
- Friendship
- Goodwill
- Alliance
|
The open rancor in political exchange averts collaboration between political gatherings.
Example:
“He talked without rancour”.
|
Random
(adjective) |
- Without definite purpose, plan, or aim
- Haphazard
- Ex. random shots
- Ex.chosen at random
|
- Casual
- Chance
- Aimless
- Sporadic
- Erratic
|
- Exact
- Specific
- Organized
- Nonrandom
|
Something that is random is inadequate all together, arrangement, or reason. It happens absolutely by chance, similar to the arbitrary picking of lottery numbers or impromptu irregular demonstrations of consideration.
Example:
“Evidently random savagery”.
|
Rank
(noun) |
- Offensive in odor or flavor
|
- Order
- Class
- Grade
- Place
- Level
- Range
|
- Sparse
- Sweet
- Beautiful
- Hidden
- Fragrant
|
The word rank regularly manages a request or the like. On the off chance that you are a high-positioning officer in the military, you can manager around fighters of lower rank.
Example:
“An armed force officer of high rank”.
|
Rankle
(verb) |
|
- Irritate
- Vex
- Nettle
- Chafe
- Grate
- Bother
- Irk
|
- Delight
- Please
- Placate
- Disarm
- Gratify
- Satisfy
- Allay
|
Rankle is a grumpy sounding verb that way to destroy or exasperate to the point of bringing about displeasure.
Example:
The injury is however cleaned over rankles still at the base.
|