CHILDER Antonyms
Best Opposite Words For CHILDER
| Word | Save | Syns.. | Usage | Type | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| adult | noun, adjectiven, adj | |||||
noun • a fully developed person from maturity onward • any mature animal adjective satellite • (of animals) fully developed • designed to arouse lust | ||||||
| elder | noun, adjectiven, adj | |||||
noun • a person who is older than you are • any of numerous shrubs or small trees of temperate and subtropical Northern Hemisphere having white flowers and berrylike fruit • any of various church officers adjective satellite • used of the older of two persons of the same name especially used to distinguish a father from his son | ||||||
| guardian | nounn | |||||
noun • a person who cares for persons or property | ||||||
| matriarch | nounn | |||||
noun • a female head of a family or tribe • a feisty older woman with a big bosom (as drawn in cartoons) | ||||||
| parent | noun, adjectiven, adj | |||||
noun • a father or mother; one who begets or one who gives birth to or nurtures and raises a child; a relative who plays the role of guardian • an organism (plant or animal) from which younger ones are obtained verb • look after a child until it is an adult | ||||||
| patriarch | nounn | |||||
noun • title for the heads of the Eastern Orthodox Churches (in Istanbul and Alexandria and Moscow and Jerusalem) • the male head of family or tribe • any of the early biblical characters regarded as fathers of the human race • a man who is older and higher in rank than yourself | ||||||
| progenitor | nounn | |||||
noun • an ancestor in the direct line | ||||||
| protector | nounn | |||||
noun • a person who cares for persons or property | ||||||
| senior | noun, adjectiven, adj | |||||
adjective • older; higher in rank; longer in length of tenure or service noun • an undergraduate student during the year preceding graduation • a person who is older than you are adjective satellite • used of the fourth and final year in United States high school or college • advanced in years; (`aged' is pronounced as two syllables) | ||||||