[
UK
/ˌæntɪpˈəʊd/
]
[ US /ˌæntɪˌpoʊd/ ]
[ US /ˌæntɪˌpoʊd/ ]
NOUN
-
direct opposite
quiet: an antipode to focused busyness
How To Use antipode In A Sentence
- The fact that I first met it as part of a pavlova didn't help: the deep clouds of snow-white sugar-cake need a fruit with a sting in its tail (the Antipodeans are bang on with their inclusion of passion fruit) if the dessert isn't to cloy. Tender delights
- Some of those unable to get to one of these Tweet-ups are contenting themselves with a glass of something cold at home – indeed, some of the Antipodean members have already celebrated! Online communities meeting offline « pwcom 2.0
- Those Antipodeans had the same understanding of rhythmic lyrics, chord progressions and harmonising melodies as Ezio.
- Carter has composed several large-scale works for choir, soloists and orchestra, including the Benedicite, which has been widely performed on both sides of the Atlantic and in the Antipodes.
- Add to this the expert didgeridoo of Ganga Giri on most tracks and the results never allow you to be in any doubt that you are in Antipodean climes.
- What I can thoroughly recommend is a recording of Brecht songs with various composers Weill, Eisler, Dessau etc. sung by Robyn Archer - our antipodean friends may know of her. Quick crossword No 12,709
- Anyway, he adds, he has a New Zealand passport as well as a British one, and two of his children live in the Antipodes, so I mustn't make assumptions about patriotism.
- The Antipodes were the body's extremities, its feet or its finger nails.
- The author traces in a wealth of detail two centuries of English immigration into Australia: the geographic origins of the main immigration streams, their reasons for leaving England and how it all played out in the Antipodes.
- It was, notwithstanding the ultimately tragic fate of the Soviet Union, the historical antipode to capitalist barbarism, and the beacon for future generations.