All lifesaver antonyms
life·sav·er
L l noun lifesaver
- disfavour — unfavorable regard; displeasure; disesteem; dislike: The prime minister incurred the king's disfavor.
- incarceration — the act of incarcerating, or putting in prison or another enclosure: The incarceration rate has increased dramatically.
- collection — A collection of things is a group of similar things that you have deliberately acquired, usually over a period of time.
- gathering — a drawing together; contraction.
- imprisonment — to confine in or as if in a prison.
- restraint — a restraining action or influence: freedom from restraint.
- check — Check is also a noun.
- continuation — The continuation of something is the fact that it continues, rather than stopping.
- cruelty — Cruelty is behaviour that deliberately causes pain or distress to people or animals.
- indulgence — the act or practice of indulging; gratification of desire.
- meanness — the state or quality of being mean.
- disdain — to look upon or treat with contempt; despise; scorn.
- ill will — hostile feeling; malevolence; enmity: to harbor ill will against someone.
- selfishness — devoted to or caring only for oneself; concerned primarily with one's own interests, benefits, welfare, etc., regardless of others.
- disapproval — the act or state of disapproving; a condemnatory feeling, look, or utterance; censure: stern disapproval.
- disfavor — unfavorable regard; displeasure; disesteem; dislike: The prime minister incurred the king's disfavor.
- intolerance — lack of tolerance; unwillingness or refusal to tolerate or respect opinions or beliefs contrary to one's own.
- malevolence — the quality, state, or feeling of being malevolent; ill will; malice; hatred.
- mercilessness — without mercy; having or showing no mercy; pitiless; cruel: a merciless critic.
- unkindness — lacking in kindness or mercy; severe.
- uncompassion — a feeling of deep sympathy and sorrow for another who is stricken by misfortune, accompanied by a strong desire to alleviate the suffering.
- hold — to have or keep in the hand; keep fast; grasp: She held the purse in her right hand. He held the child's hand in his.
- chastisement — Chastisement is the same as punishment.
- condemnation — Condemnation is the act of saying that something or someone is very bad and unacceptable.
- penalty — a punishment imposed or incurred for a violation of law or rule.
- punishment — the act of punishing.
- blame — If you blame a person or thing for something bad, you believe or say that they are responsible for it or that they caused it.
- conviction — a fixed or firmly held belief, opinion, etc
- damning — If you describe evidence or a report as damning, you mean that it suggests very strongly that someone is guilty of a crime or has made a serious mistake.
- ostracization — to exclude, by general consent, from society, friendship, conversation, privileges, etc.: His friends ostracized him after his father's arrest.