Word |
Meaning |
Synonyms |
Antonyms |
Usage of Word |
Ubiquitous
(adjective) |
- Being everywhere;
- omnipresent
- n. Ubiquity
|
- Omnipresent
- Universal
- Pervasive
- Everywhere
- All-over
|
- Rare
- Scarce
- Irregular
- Seldom
- Uncommon
|
Ubiquitous is something that seems to be present at the same time, everywhere.
Example:
“Since my sister loves the color pink, she made sure the hue was ubiquitous during her wedding”.
|
Ulcer
(noun) |
- Sore place appearing on the skin inside or outside the body
- ex. Stomach ulcer
- adj. Ulcerous
- v. Ulcerate
|
- Lesion
- Pathology
- Unhealthiness
- Pustule
- canker
|
|
Ulcer is a sore on the skin or a mucous membrane, accompanied by the disintegration of tissue, the formation of pus, etc.
Example:
“She is suffering from a gastric ulcer”.
|
Ulterior
(adjective) |
- Intentionally hidden
- beyond what is evident
- situated beyond
- unstated and often questionable
- ex. Ulterior motive
|
- Ambiguous
- Concealed
- Equivocal
- Posterior
- Subterranean
|
- Antecedent
- Expressed
- Blatant
- Open
- Known
|
Ulterior is something kept hidden in order to get a particular result.
Example:
“The ulterior of the house is beautiful”.
|
Ultimate
(adjective) |
- Final
- not susceptible to further analysis
- fundamental
- ex. The sun is the ultimate source of energy.
|
- Terminal
- Eventual
- Utmost
- Absolute
- Decisive
|
- Initial
- Opening
- Proximate
- Auxiliary
- Tentative
|
Ultimate means last; furthest or farthest; ending a process or series.
Example:
“Their ultimate fate has not yet been decided”.
|
Ultimatum
(noun) |
- Last demand
- last warning
- last statement of conditions that must be met
- ex. They have ignored our ultimatum
|
- Demand
- Warning
- Command
- Requisition
- Claim
|
- Entreat
- Feedback
- Command
- Advice
- Acknowledgement
|
Ultimatum is a demand which, if not met, will end a relationship or otherwise result in some serious consequence.
Example:
“The Devil has given Ram an ultimatum”.
|
Umbrage
(noun) |
- Resentment
- anger
- sense of injury or insult
- ex. Take umbrage at his rudeness
|
- Displeasure
- Irritation
- Offense
- Anger
- Tantrum
|
- Pleasure
- Happiness
- Love
- Comfort
- Delight
|
Umbrage is a feeling of being offended by what someone has said or done.
Example:
“He took umbrage at the way the media potrayed him.”
|
Unaccountable
(adjective) |
- inexplicable
- impossible to account for
- unreasonable or mysterious
|
- Strange
- Inexplicable
- Unintelligent
- Mysterious
- Bizarre
|
- Accountable
- Responsible
- Explicable
- Comprehensible
- liable
|
Unaccountable is impossible to account for; unexplained; inexplicable
Example:
“She has shown an unaccountable reluctance to accept their offer”.
|
Unanimity
(noun) |
- Complete agreement
- adj. Unanimous
|
- Concord
- Unity
- Harmony
- Consent
- Assent
|
- Disagreement
- Dissension
- Antagonism
- Clash
- Conflict
|
The condition of agreement by all parties, the state of being unanimous.
Example:
“The only law that requires unanimity is the social compact itself”.
|
Unassailable
(adjective) |
- Not open to attack
- Impregnable
- Not subject to question
|
- Invincible
- Secure
- Strong
- Flawless
- Inarguable
|
- Vulnerable
- Susceptible
- Contestable
- Unprotected
- Cranky
|
Unassailable is not able to be doubted, attacked, or questioned.
Example:
“They are well protected and almost unassailable”.
|
Unassuaged
(adjective) |
|
- Fed-up
- Malcontented
- Kvetching
- Unsatisfied
- Ennuied
|
|
Not assuaged; not calmed, appeased, mitigated, alleviated, satisfied or diminished.
Example:
“Victory unassuaged was theirs, and for them Fortune had cogged her dice”.
|
Unassuming
(adjective) |
- Modest
- Ex. The champion's unassuming manner
|
- Modest
- Humble
- Unobtrusive
- Bashful
- Meek
|
- Arrogant
- Confident
- Immodest
- Bold
- Boastful
|
Unassuming is not having or showing a desire to be noticed, praised, etc.
Example:
“They lived in an unassuming home”.
|
Unbridled
(adjective) |
- Violent
- Uncontrolled
- Ex. Unbridled rage/greed
|
- Barbaric
- Uncontrolled
- Uncurbed
- Ungoverned
- Wild
|
- Controlled
- Temperate
- Governed
- Checked
- Hindered
|
Unbridled is something not controlled or restrained.
Example:
“Their unbridled optimism is punctuated by huge bonuses and a stock price”.
|
Uncanny
(adjective) |
- Strange
- Mysterious
- Ex. Uncanny knack
|
- Weird
- Strange
- Unearthly
- Mysterious
- Extraordinary
|
- Regular
- Standard
- Accustomed
- Typical
- Familiar
|
Uncanny refers to something odd, mysterious or unexpected that makes you feel uneasy.
Example:
“He has an uncanny habit of talking to spirits”.
|
Unceremonious
(adjective) |
- Not done politely without due formalities
|
- Informal
- Abrupt
- Easy
- Casual
- Curt
|
- Polite
- Formal
- Ceremonious
- Courteous
- Gracious
|
Unceremonious is happening or done very suddenly and quickly with no effort to be careful or polite.
Example:
“His unceremonious dismissal by the new boss surprised everybody”.
|
Unconscionable
(adjective) |
- Unscrupulous
- Not guided by conscience
- Excessive
- Beyond reason
- Ex. Unconscionable demand
|
- Exorbitant
- Immoderate
- Extravagant
- Outrageous
- Unreasonable
|
- Moral
- Principled
- Conscientious
- Decent
- Honorable
|
Unconscionable is not guided by conscience; unscrupulous.
Example:
“Deficit spending is an unconscionable form of fiscal child abuse”.
|
Uncouth
(adjective) |
- Boorish
- Clumsy in speech or behavior
- Outlandish
|
- Crude
- Unrefined
- Vulgar
- Boorish
- Inelegant
|
- Classy
- Elegant
- Cultured
- Graceful
- Polished
|
Uncouth is awkward, clumsy or uncultured
Example:
“He is an uncouth man”.
|
Unction
(noun) |
- The act of anointing with oil
- Ex. Extreme unction
|
- Unguent
- Lotion
- Ointment
- Balm
- Cream
|
|
Unction is the act of anointing as a rite of consecration or healing.
Example:
“I hope you can attend my daughter’s baptismal unction”.
|
Unctuous
(adjective) |
- Oily
- Bland
- Insincerely suave
|
- Adulatory
- Oily
- Gushing
- Soapy
- Fulsome
|
- Artless
- Unaffected
- Unfeigned
- Honest
- Unpretentious
|
Unctuous is having an oily or soapy feel, as certain minerals.
Example:
“He speaks in an unctuous tone”.
|
Underhand(underhanded)
(adjective) |
- Done slyly and secretly (being dishonest)
|
- Deceitful
- Sneaky
- Crooked
- Dishonest
- Cunning
|
- Honest
- Overhand
- Forthright
- Honorable
- Decent
|
Underhand is something done in a sly and secret way.
Example:
“It is obscure because it is underhand”.
|
Underlying
(adjective) |
|
- Fundamental
- Essential
- Elementary
- Cardinal
- Intrinsic
|
- Secondary
- Incidental
- Ancillary
- Subordinate
- Overt
|
Underlying is used to identify the idea, cause, problem, etc., that forms the basis of something.
Example:
“There was evidently something underlying the joke”.
|
Undermine
(verb) |
- Weaken gradually
- Sap
- Dig a mine beneath
|
- Weaken
- Impair
- Sabotage
- Enfeeble
- Ruin
|
- Strengthen
- Encourage
- Bolster
- Assist
- Reinforce
|
Undermine is to injure or destroy by insidious activity or imperceptible stages, sometimes tending toward a sudden dramatic effect.
Example:
“She tried to undermine my authority by complaining about me to my boss”.
|
Underscore
(verb) |
|
- Emphasize
- Accentuate
- Accent
- Highlight
- Feature
|
- Neglect
- Dismiss
- Omit
- Disregard
- Ignore
|
Underscore is an underline drawn under a word to emphasize it.
Example:
“I’m sorry, I didn’t mean to hurt you, he said, as if to underscore that their predicament was the same”.
|
Understate
(verb) |
- State with less truth than seems warranted by the facts
- Ex. He understated the seriousness of the crime
- N. Understatement
- Op. Overstate
|
- Minimize
- Downplay
- Lessen
- Belittle
- Deprecate
|
- Exaggerate
- Overstate
- Magnify
- Maximize
- Inflate
|
Understate is to say that (something) is smaller, less important, etc., than it really is.
Example:
“To say she is a leftist is to radically understate her stand”.
|
Undertaker
(noun) |
-
- Funeral director
- One whose business is to arrange burials
|
- Funeral director
- Entrepreneur
- Embalmer
- Mortuary
- Contractor
|
|
Undertaker is a mortician or someone in the business of readying dead bodies for a funeral and setting up and conducting a funeral.
Example:
“He shoved the undertaker toward the ambulance”.
|
Undulating
(verb) |
- Moving with a wavelike motion
- V. Undulate
- Cf. Und: wave
|
- Rolling
- Cockling
- Flapping
- Swaying
- Billowing
|
|
Undulating is having a wavy surface, edge, or markings.
Example:
“Everything was dark, the country being an undulating prairie”.
|