All lassoing antonyms
las·so
L l verb lassoing
- liberate — to set free, as from imprisonment or bondage.
- release — to lease again.
- refuse — to decline to accept (something offered): to refuse an award.
- reject — to refuse to have, take, recognize, etc.: to reject the offer of a better job.
- loosen — to unfasten or undo, as a bond or fetter.
- disentangle — Free (something or someone) from an entanglement; extricate.
- let off — to allow or permit: to let him escape.
- misplace — to put in a wrong place.
- misunderstand — to take (words, statements, etc.) in a wrong sense; understand wrongly.
- free — enjoying personal rights or liberty, as a person who is not in slavery: a land of free people.
- 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.
- give — to present voluntarily and without expecting compensation; bestow: to give a birthday present to someone.
- offer — to present for acceptance or rejection; proffer: He offered me a cigarette.
- loose — free or released from fastening or attachment: a loose end.
- unfasten — to release from or as from fastenings; detach.
- miss — to fail to hit or strike: to miss a target.
- push — to press upon or against (a thing) with force in order to move it away.
- detach — If you detach one thing from another that it is fixed to, you remove it. If one thing detaches from another, it becomes separated from it.
- straighten — make straight
- unlock — to undo the lock of (a door, chest, etc.), especially with a key.
- unhook — to detach by or as if by releasing a hook: to unhook a tractor from a trailer.
- unlatch — to unfasten (a door, window shutter, etc.) by lifting the latch.
- gross — without deductions; total, as the amount of sales, salary, profit, etc., before taking deductions for expenses, taxes, or the like (opposed to net2. ): gross earnings; gross sales.