All cuing antonyms
cue
C c verb cuing
- straighten — make straight
- untwist — to untangle
- unbraid — to separate (anything braided, as hair) into the several strands.
- prevent — to keep from occurring; avert; hinder: He intervened to prevent bloodshed.
- conceal — If you conceal something, you cover it or hide it carefully.
- hide — Informal. to administer a beating to; thrash.
- withhold — to hold back; restrain or check.
- refuse — to decline to accept (something offered): to refuse an award.
- halt — to falter, as in speech, reasoning, etc.; be hesitant; stumble.
- stop — to cease from, leave off, or discontinue: to stop running.
- leave alone — separate, apart, or isolated from others: I want to be alone.
- suppress — to put an end to the activities of (a person, body of persons, etc.): to suppress the Communist and certain left-leaning parties.
- refrain — to abstain from an impulse to say or do something (often followed by from): I refrained from telling him what I thought.
- mislead — to lead or guide wrongly; lead astray.
- listen — to give attention with the ear; attend closely for the purpose of hearing; give ear.
- keep — to hold or retain in one's possession; hold as one's own: If you like it, keep it. Keep the change.
- collect — If you collect a number of things, you bring them together from several places or from several people.
- gather — to bring together into one group, collection, or place: to gather firewood; to gather the troops.
- demolish — To demolish something such as a building means to destroy it completely.
- destroy — To destroy something means to cause so much damage to it that it is completely ruined or does not exist any more.
- ruin — ruins, the remains of a building, city, etc., that has been destroyed or that is in disrepair or a state of decay: We visited the ruins of ancient Greece.
- disconnect — SCSI reconnect
- raze — to tear down; demolish; level to the ground: to raze a row of old buildings.
- 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.
- break — When an object breaks or when you break it, it suddenly separates into two or more pieces, often because it has been hit or dropped.