All offend antonyms
of·fend
O o verb offend
- 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.
- assuage — If you assuage an unpleasant feeling that someone has, you make them feel it less strongly.
- calm — A calm person does not show or feel any worry, anger, or excitement.
- comfort — If you are doing something in comfort, you are physically relaxed and contented, and are not feeling any pain or other unpleasant sensations.
- cure — If doctors or medical treatments cure an illness or injury, they cause it to end or disappear.
- delight — Delight is a feeling of very great pleasure.
- heal — to make healthy, whole, or sound; restore to health; free from ailment.
- 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.
- order — an authoritative direction or instruction; command; mandate.
- placate — to appease or pacify, especially by concessions or conciliatory gestures: to placate an outraged citizenry.
- please — (used as a polite addition to requests, commands, etc.) if you would be so obliging; kindly: Please come here. Will you please turn the radio off?
- quiet — making no noise or sound, especially no disturbing sound: quiet neighbors.
- soothe — to tranquilize or calm, as a person or the feelings; relieve, comfort, or refresh: soothing someone's anger; to soothe someone with a hot drink.
- agree — If people agree with each other about something, they have the same opinion about it or say that they have the same opinion.
- appease — If you try to appease someone, you try to stop them from being angry by giving them what they want.
- attract — If something attracts people or animals, it has features that cause them to come to it.
- behave — The way that you behave is the way that you do and say things, and the things that you do and say.
- 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.
- flatter — to make flat.
- mollify — to soften in feeling or temper, as a person; pacify; appease.
- obey — to comply with or follow the commands, restrictions, wishes, or instructions of: to obey one's parents.
- praise — the act of expressing approval or admiration; commendation; laudation.