What are some opposite words for language?

Antonyms for language
ˈlæŋ gwɪdʒlan·guage

This page is about all possible antonyms and opposite words for the term language.

Wiktionary4.3 / 6 votes

  1. languagenoun

    Nonverbal communication.

    body language

    Synonyms:
    speech, parlance, lingo, tongue

  2. languagenoun

    A computer language.

    Synonyms:
    computer language, programming language

  3. languagenoun

    The particular words used in speech or a passage of text.

    Synonyms:
    lexis, phraseology, phrasing, word, wording, term

  4. languagenoun

    Synonyms:
    phraseology, jargon, terminology

English Synonyms and Antonyms0.0 / 0 votes

  1. language

    Language (French langage < Latin lingua, the tongue) signified originally expression of thought by spoken words, but now in its widest sense it signifies expression of thought by any means; as, the language of the eyes, the language of flowers. As regards the use of words, language in its broadest sense denotes all the uttered sounds and their combinations into words and sentences that human beings employ for the communication of thought, and, in a more limited sense, the words or combinations forming a means of communication among the members of a single nation, people, or race. Speech involves always the power of articulate utterance; we can speak of the language of animals, but not of their speech. A tongue is the speech or language of some one people, country, or race. A dialect is a special mode of speaking a language peculiar to some locality or class, not recognized as in accordance with the best usage; a barbarism is a perversion of a language by ignorant foreigners, or some usage akin to that. Idiom refers to the construction of phrases and sentences, and the way of forming or using words; it is the peculiar mold in which each language casts its thought. The great difficulty of translation is to give the thought expressed in one language in the idiom of another. A dialect may be used by the highest as well as the lowest within its range; a patois is distinctly illiterate, belonging to the lower classes; those who speak a patois understand the cultured form of their own language, but speak only the degraded form, as in the case of the Italian lazzaroni or the former negro slaves in the United States. Vernacular, from the Latin, has the same general sense as the Saxon mother tongue, of one's native language, or that of a people; as, the Scriptures were translated into the vernacular. Compare DICTION.

    Synonyms:
    barbarism, dialect, diction, expression, idiom, mother tongue, patois, speech, tongue, vernacular, vocabulary

Princeton's WordNet3.0 / 1 vote

  1. language, linguistic communicationnoun

    a systematic means of communicating by the use of sounds or conventional symbols

    "he taught foreign languages"; "the language introduced is standard throughout the text"; "the speed with which a program can be executed depends on the language in which it is written"

    Synonyms:
    words, linguistic process, linguistic communication, speech, terminology, spoken language, oral communication, lyric, spoken communication, nomenclature, speech communication, voice communication

  2. speech, speech communication, spoken communication, spoken language, language, voice communication, oral communicationnoun

    (language) communication by word of mouth

    "his speech was garbled"; "he uttered harsh language"; "he recorded the spoken language of the streets"

    Synonyms:
    words, manner of speaking, spoken communication, terminology, delivery, linguistic process, actor's line, talking to, speech communication, lecture, voice communication, oral communication, lyric, linguistic communication, address, spoken language, nomenclature, speech

  3. lyric, words, languagenoun

    the text of a popular song or musical-comedy number

    "his compositions always started with the lyrics"; "he wrote both words and music"; "the song uses colloquial language"

    Synonyms:
    oral communication, nomenclature, spoken communication, wrangle, run-in, linguistic process, actor's line, speech communication, words, voice communication, spoken language, quarrel, dustup, terminology, lyric poem, row, lyric, linguistic communication, speech

  4. linguistic process, languagenoun

    the cognitive processes involved in producing and understanding linguistic communication

    "he didn't have the language to express his feelings"

    Synonyms:
    words, linguistic process, linguistic communication, speech, terminology, spoken language, oral communication, lyric, spoken communication, nomenclature, speech communication, voice communication

  5. language, speechnoun

    the mental faculty or power of vocal communication

    "language sets homo sapiens apart from all other animals"

    Synonyms:
    nomenclature, spoken communication, terminology, delivery, linguistic process, actor's line, talking to, speech communication, words, voice communication, oral communication, lyric, linguistic communication, address, spoken language, manner of speaking, speech, lecture

  6. terminology, nomenclature, languagenoun

    a system of words used to name things in a particular discipline

    "legal terminology"; "biological nomenclature"; "the language of sociology"

    Synonyms:
    words, linguistic process, linguistic communication, speech, oral communication, terminology, spoken language, nomenclature, lyric, spoken communication, speech communication, voice communication

How to use language in a sentence?

  1. Martin Tobias Lithner:

    Mathematics is the language in which the universe whispers its deepest secrets, and its eloquence is revealed through the elegance of equations.

  2. Mark Arabo:

    We've always said these folks that we rescue -- they won't take any social assistance, they'll get a job. They'll make sure we have a home for them, they get language training. They don't want any special treatment, they just want a chance to live.

  3. David Davis:

    This is an opportunity to renew our strong relationships with Commonwealth and Anglosphere countries, these parts of the world are growing faster than Europe. We share history, culture and language. We even share similar legal systems. The usual barriers to trade are largely absent.

  4. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn:

    Woe to that nation whose literature is disturbed by the intervention of power. Because that is not just a violation against freedom of print, it is the closing down of the heart of the nation, a slashing to pieces of its memory. The nation ceases to be mindful of itself, it is deprived of its spiritual unity, and despite a supposedly common language, compatriots suddenly cease to understand one another.

  5. Simon Coveney:

    From an Irish point of view there is some quite strong language that is positive, mainly that Britain is absolutely committed to what we call the backstop but more importantly they are determined to ensure that the backstop will never be necessary.

How to pronounce language?

How to say language in sign language?

Words popularity by usage frequency

rankingword
#562language
#5529cry
#12440bark
#14220jabber
#18667jargon
#21239roar
#25619babel
#29216howl
#29269whine
#55873gibberish
#188748dumbness
#275657gabble

Translation

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    An antonym for "Prosperous"?
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