All associate antonyms
as·so·ci·ate
A a noun associate
- foe — a person who feels enmity, hatred, or malice toward another; enemy: a bitter foe.
- opponent — a person who is on an opposing side in a game, contest, controversy, or the like; adversary.
- antagonist — Your antagonist is your opponent or enemy.
- competitor — A company's competitors are companies who are trying to sell similar goods or services to the same people.
- rival — a person who is competing for the same object or goal as another, or who tries to equal or outdo another; competitor.
- stranger — French L'Étranger. a novel (1942) by Albert Camus.
verb associate
- disband — to break up or dissolve (an organization): They disbanded the corporation.
- disjoin — to undo or prevent the junction or union of; disunite; separate.
- disunite — to sever the union of; separate; disjoin.
- avoid — If you avoid something unpleasant that might happen, you take action in order to prevent it from happening.
- disassociate — to dissociate.
- divorce — a divorced man.
- divide — to separate into parts, groups, sections, etc.
- separate — to keep apart or divide, as by an intervening barrier or space: to separate two fields by a fence.
- part — a portion or division of a whole that is separate or distinct; piece, fragment, fraction, or section; constituent: the rear part of the house; to glue the two parts together.
- sever — to separate (a part) from the whole, as by cutting or the like.
- leave — to go out of or away from, as a place: to leave the house.
- withdraw — to draw back, away, or aside; take back; remove: She withdrew her hand from his. He withdrew his savings from the bank.
- disagree — to fail to agree; differ: The conclusions disagree with the facts. The theories disagree in their basic premises.
- disconnect — SCSI reconnect
- dissociate — to sever the association of (oneself); separate: He tried to dissociate himself from the bigotry in his past.
- detach — If you detach one thing from another that it is fixed to, you remove it. If one thing detaches from another, it becomes separated from it.
- disperse — to drive or send off in various directions; scatter: to disperse a crowd.