antithesis
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++LDOCE 5++an·tith·e·sis /ænˈtɪθɪsɪs/ noun (plural antitheses /-siːz/) [countable] formalOPPOSITE/REVERSE the complete opposite of something 正相反,相对;对立面antithesis of This is not democratic. It is the antithesis of democracy. 这不民主,而是民主的对立面。
Examples from the Corpus
antithesis• But to suggest that the conflict was over political rather than intellectual matters is to introduce a false antithesis.• Coercion and domination subvert the integrity of love by creating power relationships that are its antithesis.• In the domestic sphere the policy was equally fundamental, for tariff reform was seen as the antithesis of socialism.• He was a quiet, caring and loving boy, his nature being the antithesis of mine.• Research is the antithesis of randomness.• It seemed who they were was the antithesis of who they needed to be.Origin antithesis (1500-1600) Late Latin Greek, “opposition”, from antitithenai “to be against”, from anti- ( → ANTI-) + tithenai “to put”an·tith·e·sis nounChineseSyllable
of Corpus opposite something complete the
antithesis
an‧tith‧e‧sis /ænˈtɪθəsəs, ænˈtɪθɪsəs/
noun (plural antitheses /-siːz/) [countable]
antithesis of
This is not democratic. It is the antithesis of democracy.
an‧tith‧e‧sis /ænˈtɪθəsəs, ænˈtɪθɪsəs/
noun (plural antitheses /-siːz/) [countable] Date: 1500-1600
Language: Late Latin
Origin: Greek, 'opposition', from antitithenai 'to be against', from anti- ( ⇨ anti-) + tithenai 'to put'
formal the complete opposite of somethingLanguage: Late Latin
Origin: Greek, 'opposition', from antitithenai 'to be against', from anti- ( ⇨ anti-) + tithenai 'to put'
antithesis of