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All chairing antonyms

chair
C c

verb chairing

  • disorder — lack of order or regular arrangement; confusion: Your room is in utter disorder.
  • disorganize — to destroy the organization, systematic arrangement, or orderly connection of; throw into confusion or disorder.
  • obey — to comply with or follow the commands, restrictions, wishes, or instructions of: to obey one's parents.
  • ignore — to refrain from noticing or recognizing: to ignore insulting remarks.
  • disregard — to pay no attention to; leave out of consideration; ignore: Disregard the footnotes.
  • desert — A desert is a large area of land, usually in a hot region, where there is almost no water, rain, trees, or plants.
  • comply — If someone or something complies with an order or set of rules, they are in accordance with what is required or expected.
  • consent — If you give your consent to something, you give someone permission to do it.
  • abandon — If you abandon a place, thing, or person, you leave the place, thing, or person permanently or for a long time, especially when you should not do so.
  • give up — the quality or state of being resilient; springiness.
  • let go — to move or proceed, especially to or from something: They're going by bus.
  • serve — to act as a servant.
  • neglect — to pay no attention or too little attention to; disregard or slight: The public neglected his genius for many years.
  • mismanage — Manage (something) badly or wrongly.
  • follow — to come after in sequence, order of time, etc.: The speech follows the dinner.
  • leave — to go out of or away from, as a place: to leave the house.
  • lose — to come to be without (something in one's possession or care), through accident, theft, etc., so that there is little or no prospect of recovery: I'm sure I've merely misplaced my hat, not lost it.
  • egg on — to incite or urge; encourage (usually followed by on).
  • incite — to stir, encourage, or urge on; stimulate or prompt to action: to incite a crowd to riot.
  • liberate — to set free, as from imprisonment or bondage.
  • unleash — to release from or as if from a leash; set loose to pursue or run at will.
  • free — enjoying personal rights or liberty, as a person who is not in slavery: a land of free people.
  • turn over — to cause to move around on an axis or about a center; rotate: to turn a wheel.
  • cease — If something ceases, it stops happening or existing.
  • refrain — to abstain from an impulse to say or do something (often followed by from): I refrained from telling him what I thought.
  • idle — not working or active; unemployed; doing nothing: idle workers.
  • halt — to falter, as in speech, reasoning, etc.; be hesitant; stumble.
  • stop — to cease from, leave off, or discontinue: to stop running.
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