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All fly antonyms

fly
F f

verb fly

  • stand your ground — relating to or denoting a legal principle or law that eliminates the duty to retreat by allowing, as a first response, self-defense by deadly force: We’re proud to represent Florida, the first stand your ground state.
  • remain — to continue in the same state; continue to be as specified: to remain at peace.
  • slow — moving or proceeding with little or less than usual speed or velocity: a slow train.
  • decelerate — When a vehicle or machine decelerates or when someone in a vehicle decelerates, the speed of the vehicle or machine is reduced.
  • walk — to advance or travel on foot at a moderate speed or pace; proceed by steps; move by advancing the feet alternately so that there is always one foot on the ground in bipedal locomotion and two or more feet on the ground in quadrupedal locomotion.
  • confront — If you are confronted with a problem, task, or difficulty, you have to deal with it.
  • stay — (of a ship) to change to the other tack.
  • rest — a support for a lance; lance rest.
  • landEdwin Herbert, 1909–91, U.S. inventor and businessman: created the Polaroid camera.
  • face — the front part of the head, from the forehead to the chin.
  • procrastinate — to defer action; delay: to procrastinate until an opportunity is lost.
  • wait — to remain inactive or in a state of repose, as until something expected happens (often followed by for, till, or until): to wait for the bus to arrive.
  • dawdle — If you dawdle, you spend more time than is necessary going somewhere.
  • dally — If you dally, you act or move very slowly, wasting time.
  • delay — If you delay doing something, you do not do it immediately or at the planned or expected time, but you leave it until later.
  • obey — to comply with or follow the commands, restrictions, wishes, or instructions of: to obey one's parents.
  • allow — If someone is allowed to do something, it is all right for them to do it and they will not get into trouble.
  • arrive — When a person or vehicle arrives at a place, they come to it at the end of a journey.
  • 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.
  • meet — greatest lower bound
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