All overcrowding antonyms
o·ver·crowd
O o noun overcrowding
- lack — something missing or needed: After he left, they really felt the lack.
- necessity — something necessary or indispensable: food, shelter, and other necessities of life.
- need — a requirement, necessary duty, or obligation: There is no need for you to go there.
- want — to feel a need or a desire for; wish for: to want one's dinner; always wanting something new.
- opening — an open or clear space.
- discouragement — an act or instance of discouraging.
- insufficiency — deficiency in amount, force, power, competence, or fitness; inadequacy: insufficiency of supplies.
verb overcrowding
- abstain — If you abstain from something, usually something you want to do, you deliberately do not do it.
- diet — the legislative body of certain countries, as Japan.
- fast — moving or able to move, operate, function, or take effect quickly; quick; swift; rapid: a fast horse; a fast pain reliever; a fast thinker.
- let go — to move or proceed, especially to or from something: They're going by bus.
- nibble — to bite off small bits.
- pull — pull media
- release — to lease again.
- surrender — to yield (something) to the possession or power of another; deliver up possession of on demand or under duress: to surrender the fort to the enemy; to surrender the stolen goods to the police.
- yield — to give forth or produce by a natural process or in return for cultivation: This farm yields enough fruit to meet all our needs.
- let out — (of fur) processed by cutting parallel diagonal slashes into the pelt and sewing the slashed edges together to lengthen the pelt and to improve the appearance of the fur.
- 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.
- disperse — to drive or send off in various directions; scatter: to disperse a crowd.
- distribute — to divide and give out in shares; deal out; allot.
- divide — to separate into parts, groups, sections, etc.
- scatter — to throw loosely about; distribute at irregular intervals: to scatter seeds.
- separate — to keep apart or divide, as by an intervening barrier or space: to separate two fields by a fence.
- spread — to draw, stretch, or open out, especially over a flat surface, as something rolled or folded (often followed by out).
- throw away — to propel or cast in any way, especially to project or propel from the hand by a sudden forward motion or straightening of the arm and wrist: to throw a ball.
- abandon — If you abandon a place, thing, or person, you leave the place, thing, or person permanently or for a long time, especially when you should not do so.
- leave — to go out of or away from, as a place: to leave the house.
- retreat — the forced or strategic withdrawal of an army or an armed force before an enemy, or the withdrawing of a naval force from action.
- underwhelm — to fail to interest or astonish: After all the ballyhoo, most critics were underwhelmed by the movie.
- dry — free from moisture or excess moisture; not moist; not wet: a dry towel; dry air.
- float — to rest or remain on the surface of a liquid; be buoyant: The hollow ball floated.
- pass up — to move past; go by: to pass another car on the road.
- unblock — to remove a block or obstruction from: to unblock a channel; to unblock a person's credit.