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All disregard antonyms

dis·re·gard
D d

noun disregard

  • honour — to hold in honor or high respect; revere: to honor one's parents.
  • admiration — Admiration is a feeling of great liking and respect for a person or thing.
  • love — a profoundly tender, passionate affection for another person.
  • respect — a particular, detail, or point (usually preceded by in): to differ in some respect.
  • care — If you care about something, you feel that it is important and are concerned about it.
  • concern — Concern is worry about a situation.
  • feeling — a quality of an object that is perceived by feeling or touching: the soft feel of cotton.
  • interest — the feeling of a person whose attention, concern, or curiosity is particularly engaged by something: She has a great interest in the poetry of Donne.
  • sympathy — harmony of or agreement in feeling, as between persons or on the part of one person with respect to another.
  • regard — to look upon or think of with a particular feeling: to regard a person with favor.
  • approval — If you win someone's approval for something that you ask for or suggest, they agree to it.
  • remembrance — a retained mental impression; memory.
  • attention — If you give someone or something your attention, you look at it, listen to it, or think about it carefully.
  • honor — honesty, fairness, or integrity in one's beliefs and actions: a man of honor.
  • note — a brief record of something written down to assist the memory or for future reference.

verb disregard

  • heed — to give careful attention to: He did not heed the warning.
  • remember — to recall to the mind by an act or effort of memory; think of again: I'll try to remember the exact date.
  • compliment — A compliment is a polite remark that you say to someone to show that you like their appearance, appreciate their qualities, or approve of what they have done.
  • praise — the act of expressing approval or admiration; commendation; laudation.
  • admire — If you admire someone or something, you like and respect them very much.
  • approve — If you approve of an action, event, or suggestion, you like it or are pleased about it.
  • flatter — to make flat.
  • succeed — to happen or terminate according to desire; turn out successfully; have the desired result: Our efforts succeeded.
  • like — in like manner with; similarly to; in the manner characteristic of: He works like a beaver.
  • attend — If you attend a meeting or other event, you are present at it.
  • pay attention — be attentive
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