All imbalance antonyms
imΒ·balΒ·ance
I i verb imbalance
- communize β to make (property) public; nationalize
- come to β When someone who is unconscious comes to, they recover consciousness.
- live up to β to have life, as an organism; be alive; be capable of vital functions: all things that live.
- collimate β to adjust the line of sight of (an optical instrument)
- offed β so as to be no longer supported or attached: This button is about to come off.
- commeasure β to coincide with in degree, extent, quality, etc
- counter check β a check available at a bank for the use of depositors in making withdrawals, orig. kept in supply on a counter
- allying β to unite formally, as by treaty, league, marriage, or the like (usually followed by with or to): Russia allied itself to France.
- counter-checking β a check that opposes or restrains.
- amount to β If you say that one thing amounts to something else, you consider the first thing to be the same as the second thing.
- bracketed β a support, as of metal or wood, projecting from a wall or the like to hold or bear the weight of a shelf, part of a cornice, etc.
- compare β When you compare things, you consider them and discover the differences or similarities between them.
- balance β If you balance something somewhere, or if it balances there, it remains steady and does not fall.
- correlate β If one thing correlates with another, there is a close similarity or connection between them, often because one thing causes the other. You can also say that two things correlate.
- counterbalance β To counterbalance something means to balance or correct it with something that has an equal but opposite effect.
- emblematize β Serve as a symbolic representation of (a quality or concept).
- bracketing β a set of brackets
- countercheck β a check or restraint, esp one that acts in opposition to another
- democratize β If a country or a system is democratized, it is made democratic.
- measure up β a unit or standard of measurement: weights and measures.
noun imbalance
- conformability β Conformableness.
- order β an authoritative direction or instruction; command; mandate.
- homology β the state of being homologous; homologous relation or correspondence.
- equivalence β The condition of being equal or equivalent in value, worth, function, etc.
- keeping β board and lodging; subsistence; support: to work for one's keep.
- make-up β the style or manner in which something is made; form; build.
- levelheadedness β The property of being levelheaded, stable, not overly swayed by passion.
- coadunation β (obsolete) union into a single body or mass; unity.
- indistinguishability β The state of being indistinguishable.
- lissomeness β The quality of being lissome.
- grace β William Russell, 1832β1904, U.S. financier and shipping magnate, born in Ireland: mayor of New York City 1880β88.
- gracefulness β The state of being graceful.
- agglutination β the act or process of agglutinating
- comparability β capable of being compared; having features in common with something else to permit or suggest comparison: He considered the Roman and British empires to be comparable.
- exchangeability β The condition of being exchangeable.
- hellenism β ancient Greek culture or ideals.
- codification β the systematic organization of methods, rules, etc
- organisation β the act or process of organizing.
- commensurateness β The state or quality of being commensurate.
- correlation β A correlation between things is a connection or link between them.
- inter-relationship β reciprocal relation.
- form β external appearance of a clearly defined area, as distinguished from color or material; configuration: a triangular form.
- correspondence β Correspondence is the act of writing letters to someone.
- coequality β The condition of being coequal.
- organization β the act or process of organizing.
- ciceronianism β imitation of the style of Cicero, especially as practiced by some writers and orators during the Renaissance.
- organum β an organon.
- formulation β to express in precise form; state definitely or systematically: He finds it extremely difficult to formulate his new theory.
- isonomy β equality of political rights.