Opaque antonyms

  1. Opposite of Opaque, Antonym of Opaque, 11 Opposite Words For Opaque
  2. Obscure vs Opaque
  3. opaque


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Opposite of Opaque, Antonym of Opaque, 11 Opposite Words For Opaque

• transparent • crystal • clear • pellucid • gauzy • hyaloid • see-through • peekaboo • liquid • sheer • hyaline Example Sentences • Endless moons, an opaque universe, thunder, tornadoes, the quaking earth. Rare moments of peace; forehead up against my knees, arms around my head, I thought, I listened, I longed not to exist. • I myself am opaque, for some reason. Their eyes cannot see me. Yes, that’s it: The world is autistic with respect to me. Most Common Opposite Words List already – not yet argue – agree arrest – free arrival – departure arrive – depart busy – lazy buy – sell calm – excited careful – careless careless – careful catch – miss ceiling – floor defend – attack empty – full fix – break flat – hilly harvest – plant humid – dry hungry – thirsty husband – wife ose – win loser – winner loud – quiet ever – always new – ancient occupied – vacant odd – even off – on resent – past private – public sad – happy sadness – happiness safe – dangerous safety – danger thin – thick useless – useful vacant – occupied valley – mountain omen – men yes – no young – old

Obscure vs Opaque

Adjective( en-adj)• Dark, faint or indistinct. • * ( Dante Alighieri), , 1, 1-2 I found myself in an obscure wood. • * Bible, Proverbs xx. 20 His lamp shall be put out in obscure darkness. • Hidden, out of sight or inconspicuous. • * ( William Shakespeare) The obscure bird / Clamoured the livelong night. • * Sir J. Davies the obscure corners of the earth • Difficult to understand. • * Verb( obscur)• ( label) To render obscure; to darken; to make dim; to keep in the dark; to hide; to make less visible, intelligible, legible, glorious, beautiful, or illustrious. • * ( William Shakespeare) (1564-1616) They are all couched in a pit hard by Herne's oak, with obscured lights. • * ( William Wake) (1657-1737) There is scarce any duty which has been so obscured by the writings of learned men as this. • *{{quote-book, year=1959, author=( Georgette Heyer), title=( The Unknown Ajax), chapter=1, passage=But Richmond • ( label) To hide, put out of sight etc. • * ( Bill Watterson), Homicidal Psycho Jungle Cat , page 62 I realized that the purpose of writing is to inflate weak ideas, obscure poor reasoning, and inhibit clarity. • To conceal oneself; to hide. • * ( Beaumont and Fletcher) (1603-1625) How! There's bad news. / I must obscure , and hear it. Adjective( • Neither reflecting nor emitting light. • Allowing little light to pass through, not translucent or transparent. • (figuratively) Unclear, unintelligible, hard to get or explain the meaning of • (figuratively) Obtuse, stupid. •...

opaque

Contents • 1 English • 1.1 Alternative forms • 1.2 Etymology • 1.3 Pronunciation • 1.4 Adjective • 1.4.1 Usage notes • 1.4.2 Antonyms • 1.4.3 Derived terms • 1.4.4 Related terms • 1.4.5 Translations • 1.5 Noun • 1.5.1 Translations • 1.6 Verb • 1.6.1 Synonyms • 1.6.2 Translations • 1.7 See also • 1.8 References • 2 French • 2.1 Etymology • 2.2 Pronunciation • 2.3 Adjective • 2.3.1 Derived terms • 2.3.2 Descendants • 2.4 Further reading • 3 Middle French • 3.1 Adjective • 4 Spanish • 4.1 Verb English [ ] We have agreed that heat is energy to begin with. Light is also a form of energy for when absorbed by any opaque substance it turns completely into heat. • Allowing little • ( ) • ( ) • ( ) Describes a Usage notes [ ] • The comparative more opaque and most opaque and seem to occur more frequently in poetry. • Most opaque has been more common than opaquest for at least two centuries and 50 to 100 times more common in the last two decades, according to Antonyms [ ] • ( physically ) : • ( figuratively ) : Derived terms [ ] • • • • Related terms [ ] • Translations [ ] • Arabic: m ( ʔakmad ) • Belarusian: ( njeprazrýsty ) • Bulgarian: ( neprozračen ) • Catalan: • Chinese: Mandarin: ( bù tòumíng ) • Czech: m • Dutch: • Finnish: • French: m or f • Georgian: ( gaumč̣virvale ), ( šukgaumṭari ) • German: • Greek: ( adiafanís ) • Hungarian: • Icelandic: • Italian: m, f • Japanese: ( ふとうめいな, futōmei-na ) • Korean: ( bultumyeonghada ) • Latvian: • Malay: • Maori: • Norwegian: • Occitan: ...