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All flanking antonyms

flank
F f

adjective flanking

  • centred — If an industry or event is centred in a place, it takes place to the greatest extent there.

verb flanking

  • centre — A centre is a building where people have meetings, take part in a particular activity, or get help of some kind.
  • release — to lease again.
  • center — a point equally distant from all points on the circumference of a circle or surface of a sphere
  • let go — to move or proceed, especially to or from something: They're going by bus.
  • 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.
  • free — enjoying personal rights or liberty, as a person who is not in slavery: a land of free people.
  • loose — free or released from fastening or attachment: a loose end.
  • unloose — to loosen or relax (the grasp, hold, fingers, etc.).
  • unsettle — to alter from a settled state; cause to be no longer firmly fixed or established; render unstable; disturb: Violence unsettled the government.
  • aid — Aid is money, equipment, or services that are provided for people, countries, or organizations who need them but cannot provide them for themselves.
  • assist — If you assist someone, you help them to do a job or task by doing part of the work for them.
  • distort — to twist awry or out of shape; make crooked or deformed: Arthritis had distorted his fingers.
  • tangle — to bring together into a mass of confusedly interlaced or intertwisted threads, strands, or other like parts; snarl.
  • help — to give or provide what is necessary to accomplish a task or satisfy a need; contribute strength or means to; render assistance to; cooperate effectively with; aid; assist: He planned to help me with my work. Let me help you with those packages.
  • open — not closed or barred at the time, as a doorway by a door, a window by a sash, or a gateway by a gate: to leave the windows open at night.
  • confuse — If you confuse two things, you get them mixed up, so that you think one of them is the other one.
  • twist — to combine, as two or more strands or threads, by winding together; intertwine.
  • face — the front part of the head, from the forehead to the chin.
  • meet — greatest lower bound
  • take on — to get into one's hold or possession by voluntary action: to take a cigarette out of a box; to take a pen and begin to write.

adj flanking

  • central — Something that is central is in the middle of a place or area.
  • centered — If an industry or event is centered in a place, it takes place to the greatest extent there.
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