Childrens Illustrated Thesaurus

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

152


A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
official^1
adjective approved by someone
in authority » Official figures
show that more people use the
pool in summer than winter.
authorized, certified,
formal, licensed
antonym: unofficial

official^2
noun someone in authority
» We asked an official for
directions to our seats.
executive, officer,
representative,
bureaucrat, functionary

often
adverb happening many times
» My parents often go to Italy
on holiday.
frequently, repeatedly

okay or OK
adjective (informal) acceptable
or satisfactory » Is it okay
if I bring a friend to your party?
acceptable, all right

old^1
adjective having lived for a
long time » Gareth helped
the old lady with her shopping.
aged, ancient,
elderly, venerable
antonym: young

old^2
adjective something in the past
◀◀ SEE LEFT

old-fashioned
adjective no longer fashionable
» Granny has an old-fashioned
record player.
antiquated, archaic,
dated, obsolete, outdated,
outmoded, out of date,
passé, behind the times,
obsolescent, old-time
antonym: fashionable

omen
noun a sign of what will happen
» There is a proverb that says
a black cat crossing your path
is an omen of disaster.
sign, warning, augury,
portent

ominous
adjective suggesting that
something bad will happen
» There was an ominous
silence in the shop after Tom
broke the expensive vase.
sinister, threatening,
inauspicious, portentous,
unpropitious

omit
verb to not include something
» Omit the ham to make the
pie suitable for vegetarians.
exclude, leave out,
miss out, skip

only^1
adverb involving one person
or thing » Only Keith knows
whether or not he’ll be well
enough to play.
just, merely, purely,
simply, solely

only^2
adjective having no other
examples » The only tree
in the field is an oak.
one, sole

open^1
verb to cause something not
to be closed » Mum opened
the door to let us in.
uncover, undo, unlock,
unfasten, unseal
Granny has an old-fashioned antonym: shut
record player.

The only tree in the field is an oak.

official


old


(^2) adjective something in the past
» In the old days, knights went
into battle to defend their king.
bygone
Archaeology can tell
us about bygone eras.
remote
The days of the
Wild West are
so remote.
early
In the early days of television,
programmes were in black and white.
ex
He felt awkward seeing
his ex-wife.
former
She always greeted her
former teacher with a hug.
olden
It’s fun to dress up in
costumes from olden times.
one time
The one-time
president of the
club argued against
the latest rules.
past
She was hired
because of her
past experience.
previous
In previous episodes,
the bad guy always lost.
prior
I can’t come to the
party, I have prior
arrangements.
ancient
In ancient times, the Romans
conquered much of Europe.
earlier
The painter’s earlier work is
more colourful.
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