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All decide antonyms

de·cide
D d

verb decide

  • prevaricate — to speak falsely or misleadingly; deliberately misstate or create an incorrect impression; lie.
  • waver — to sway to and fro; flutter: Foliage wavers in the breeze.
  • commence — When something commences or you commence it, it begins.
  • unsettle — to alter from a settled state; cause to be no longer firmly fixed or established; render unstable; disturb: Violence unsettled the government.
  • refuse — to decline to accept (something offered): to refuse an award.
  • grow — to increase by natural development, as any living organism or part by assimilation of nutriment; increase in size or substance.
  • delay — If you delay doing something, you do not do it immediately or at the planned or expected time, but you leave it until later.
  • hesitate — to be reluctant or wait to act because of fear, indecision, or disinclination: She hesitated to take the job.
  • postpone — to put off to a later time; defer: He has postponed his departure until tomorrow.
  • procrastinate — to defer action; delay: to procrastinate until an opportunity is lost.
  • put off — to move or place (anything) so as to get it into or out of a specific location or position: to put a book on the shelf.
  • wait — to remain inactive or in a state of repose, as until something expected happens (often followed by for, till, or until): to wait for the bus to arrive.
  • begin — To begin to do something means to start doing it.
  • start — to begin or set out, as on a journey or activity.
  • plant — any member of the kingdom Plantae, comprising multicellular organisms that typically produce their own food from inorganic matter by the process of photosynthesis and that have more or less rigid cell walls containing cellulose, including vascular plants, mosses, liverworts, and hornworts: some classification schemes may include fungi, algae, bacteria, blue-green algae, and certain single-celled eukaryotes that have plantlike qualities, as rigid cell walls or photosynthesis.
  • defer — If you defer an event or action, you arrange for it to happen at a later date, rather than immediately or at the previously planned time.

noun decide

  • challenge — A challenge is something new and difficult which requires great effort and determination.
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