All measure antonyms
meas·ure
M m verb measure
- estimate — Roughly calculate or judge the value, number, quantity, or extent of.
- ignore — to refrain from noticing or recognizing: to ignore insulting remarks.
- disorder — lack of order or regular arrangement; confusion: Your room is in utter disorder.
- disorganize — to destroy the organization, systematic arrangement, or orderly connection of; throw into confusion or disorder.
- neglect — to pay no attention or too little attention to; disregard or slight: The public neglected his genius for many years.
- divide — to separate into parts, groups, sections, etc.
- separate — to keep apart or divide, as by an intervening barrier or space: to separate two fields by a fence.
noun measure
- extreme — Reaching a high or the highest degree; very great.
- cessation — The cessation of something is the stopping of it.
- inertia — inertness, especially with regard to effort, motion, action, and the like; inactivity; sluggishness.
- repose — the state of reposing or being at rest; rest; sleep.
- stoppage — an act or instance of stopping; cessation of activity: the stoppage of all work at the factory.
- rest — a support for a lance; lance rest.
- freedom — the state of being free or at liberty rather than in confinement or under physical restraint: He won his freedom after a retrial.
- permanent — existing perpetually; everlasting, especially without significant change.
- wildness — living in a state of nature; not tamed or domesticated: a wild animal; wild geese.
- mismeasure — a unit or standard of measurement: weights and measures.
- whole — comprising the full quantity, amount, extent, number, etc., without diminution or exception; entire, full, or total: He ate the whole pie. They ran the whole distance.
- ignorance — the state or fact of being ignorant; lack of knowledge, learning, information, etc.
- inaction — absence of action; idleness.
- importance — the quality or state of being important; consequence; significance.
- guess — to arrive at or commit oneself to an opinion about (something) without having sufficient evidence to support the opinion fully: to guess a person's weight.
- idleness — the quality, state, or condition of being lazy, inactive, or idle: His lack of interest in the larger world and his consummate idleness were the causes of their dreadful divorce.
- inactivity — not active: an inactive volcano.