All intermeddle antonyms
in·ter·med·dle
I i verb intermeddle
- aid — Aid is money, equipment, or services that are provided for people, countries, or organizations who need them but cannot provide them for themselves.
- assist — If you assist someone, you help them to do a job or task by doing part of the work for them.
- facilitate — to make easier or less difficult; help forward (an action, a process, etc.): Careful planning facilitates any kind of work.
- permit — to allow to do something: Permit me to explain.
- benefit — The benefit of something is the help that you get from it or the advantage that results from it.
- abet — If one person abets another, they help or encourage them to do something criminal or wrong. Abet is often used in the legal expression 'aid and abet'.
- advance — To advance means to move forward, often in order to attack someone.
- allow — If someone is allowed to do something, it is all right for them to do it and they will not get into trouble.
- forward — toward or at a place, point, or time in advance; onward; ahead: to move forward; from this day forward; to look forward.
- help — to give or provide what is necessary to accomplish a task or satisfy a need; contribute strength or means to; render assistance to; cooperate effectively with; aid; assist: He planned to help me with my work. Let me help you with those packages.
- promote — to help or encourage to exist or flourish; further: to promote world peace.
- support — to bear or hold up (a load, mass, structure, part, etc.); serve as a foundation for.
- continue — If someone or something continues to do something, they keep doing it and do not stop.
- go — to move or proceed, especially to or from something: They're going by bus.
- subtract — to withdraw or take away, as a part from a whole.
- please — (used as a polite addition to requests, commands, etc.) if you would be so obliging; kindly: Please come here. Will you please turn the radio off?
- leave — to go out of or away from, as a place: to leave the house.
- leave alone — separate, apart, or isolated from others: I want to be alone.
- withdraw — to draw back, away, or aside; take back; remove: She withdrew her hand from his. He withdrew his savings from the bank.
- retreat — the forced or strategic withdrawal of an army or an armed force before an enemy, or the withdrawing of a naval force from action.
- avoid — If you avoid something unpleasant that might happen, you take action in order to prevent it from happening.
- dodge — to elude or evade by a sudden shift of position or by strategy: to dodge a blow; to dodge a question.
- ignore — to refrain from noticing or recognizing: to ignore insulting remarks.
- yield — to give forth or produce by a natural process or in return for cultivation: This farm yields enough fruit to meet all our needs.