antithesis
noun /ænˈtɪθəsɪs/
/ænˈtɪθəsɪs/
[usually singular] (plural antitheses
(formal) /ænˈtɪθəsiːz/
/ænˈtɪθəsiːz/
)- the opposite of something
- Love is the antithesis of selfishness.
- Students finishing their education at 16 is the very antithesis of what society needs.
- The current establishment is the antithesis of democracy.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- absolute
- complete
- exact
- …
- be
- represent
- antithesis between
- antithesis of
- a contrast between two things
- There is an antithesis between the needs of the state and the needs of the people.
- the sharp antithesis between their views
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- absolute
- complete
- exact
- …
- be
- represent
- antithesis between
- antithesis of
Word Originlate Middle English (originally denoting the substitution of one grammatical case for another): from late Latin, from Greek antitithenai ‘set against’, from anti ‘against’ + tithenai ‘to place’. The earliest current sense, denoting a rhetorical or literary device, dates from the early 16th cent.