The English language (and, we may presume, many other languages) has both antonyms and synonyms. There are many more words with synonyms than there are words with antonyms, since many things exist which do not have an opposite (the word sandwich, for instance, may be said to have synonyms in the words hoagie, grinder, submarine, and many other words, but there is no opposite of sandwich). Antonym is also a much more recent addition to English than synonym is; it first appeared in the 1860s, whereas synonym has been used for more than 500 years.
Additionally, both nouns have adjectival forms: synonymous and antonymous. Synonymous, which is often used loosely ("She has become synonymous with good taste"), is the more common of the two.
Examples of antonym in a Sentence
“Hot” and “cold” are antonyms.
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More often than not, polish is associated with corporate environment and advertisement, often an antonym of authenticity.—Leo Guan, Forbes, 7 Oct. 2024 Indoctrination is the antonym of critical thinking.—Armstrong Williams, Baltimore Sun, 3 Mar. 2024 Cisgender is a term for a person whose gender identity matches the one assigned to them at birth—an antonym for transgender.—Scott Nover, Quartz, 21 June 2023 Accountable is an antonym of the first words that come to mind.—Chad Finn, BostonGlobe.com, 1 Apr. 2023 Or was it bungled when Snyder was replaced by his tonal antonym, Joss Whedon?—Max Cea, Vulture, 18 Mar. 2021 Cooper, on the other hand, is the living, breathing antonym of controversy.—Nick Martin, The New Republic, 26 Oct. 2020
Word History
Etymology
borrowed from French antonyme, probably back-formation (after synonymesynonym) from antonymie "opposition of words with contrary senses," borrowed from Greek antōnymía "pronoun (i.e., a word substituting for another), interchange of names," from ant-, anti- "in opposition to, in place of" + -ōnymos "having a name (of the kind specified)" + -ia-ia entry 1 — more at anti-, homonymous
Note:
French antonyme appears in the title and text of Dictionnaire des antonymes ou contremots (Paris & Berlin, 1842), an early dictionary of antonyms compiled from 17th-18th-century authors by the Alsatian philologist Paul Ackermann (1812-46), who may have coined the word. In English antonym was promulgated, if not first used, by the British clergyman Charles John Smith (1819-72) in Synonyms and Antonyms, Collected and Contrasted (London: Bell & Daldy, 1867), which went through several subsequent editions and reprints.
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