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All body antonyms

bod·y
B b

noun body

  • outside — the outer side, surface, or part; exterior: The outside of the house needs painting.
  • imbody — embody.
  • abstract — An abstract idea or way of thinking is based on general ideas rather than on real things and events.
  • concept — A concept is an idea or abstract principle.
  • fantasy — imagination, especially when extravagant and unrestrained.
  • nothing — no thing; not anything; naught: to say nothing.
  • nothingness — the state of being nothing.
  • individual — a single human being, as distinguished from a group.
  • mind — (in a human or other conscious being) the element, part, substance, or process that reasons, thinks, feels, wills, perceives, judges, etc.: the processes of the human mind.
  • soul — the principle of life, feeling, thought, and action in humans, regarded as a distinct entity separate from the body, and commonly held to be separable in existence from the body; the spiritual part of humans as distinct from the physical part.
  • spirit — the principle of conscious life; the vital principle in humans, animating the body or mediating between body and soul.
  • immateriality — state or character of being immaterial.
  • inanimate — not animate; lifeless.
  • thought — Informal. the act or a period of thinking: I want to sit down and give it a good think.
  • one — being or amounting to a single unit or individual or entire thing, item, or object rather than two or more; a single: one woman; one nation; one piece of cake.
  • plant — any member of the kingdom Plantae, comprising multicellular organisms that typically produce their own food from inorganic matter by the process of photosynthesis and that have more or less rigid cell walls containing cellulose, including vascular plants, mosses, liverworts, and hornworts: some classification schemes may include fungi, algae, bacteria, blue-green algae, and certain single-celled eukaryotes that have plantlike qualities, as rigid cell walls or photosynthesis.
  • 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.
  • whole — comprising the full quantity, amount, extent, number, etc., without diminution or exception; entire, full, or total: He ate the whole pie. They ran the whole distance.
  • single — only one in number; one only; unique; sole: a single example.
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