Antonym for the word complete

Synonym definition

A synonym is a word, adjective, verb or expression that has the same meaning as another, or almost the same meaning. Synonyms are other words that mean the same thing. This avoids repetitions in a sentence without changing its meaning.

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Examples of antonyms

The words blockage, encumbrance, handicap are antonyms for «help».

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WiktionaryRate these synonyms:0.0 / 0 votes

  1. completeverb

    Antonyms:
    incomplete

    Synonyms:
    accomplish, finish

  2. completeverb

    With all parts included; with nothing missing; full.

    He completed the assignment on time.

    Antonyms:
    incomplete

    Synonyms:
    accomplish, finish

  3. completeadjective

    To make whole or entire.

    When your homework is complete, you can go and play with Martin.

    Antonyms:
    incomplete

    Synonyms:
    finish, accomplish

  4. completeadjective

    Antonyms:
    incomplete

  5. completeadjective

    Antonyms:
    incomplete

  6. completeadjective

    Antonyms:
    incomplete

  7. completeadjective

    Synonyms:
    entire, total

English Synonyms and AntonymsRate these synonyms:0.0 / 0 votes

  1. complete

    Do is the one comprehensive word which includes this whole class. We may say of the least item of daily work, «It is done,» and of the grandest human achievement, «Well doneFinish and complete signify to bring to an end what was previously begun; there is frequently the difference in usage that finish is applied to the fine details and is superficial, while complete is comprehensive, being applied to the whole ideal, plan, and execution; as, to finish a statue; to complete a scheme of philosophy. To discharge is to do what is given in charge, expected, or required; as, to discharge the duties of the office. To fulfil is to do or to be what has been promised, expected, hoped, or desired; as, a son fulfils a father’s hopes. Realize, effect, execute, and consummate all signify to embody in fact what was before in thought. One may realize that which he has done nothing to bring about; he may realize the dreams of youth by inheriting a fortune; but he can not effect his early designs except by doing the utmost that is necessary to make them fact. Effect includes all that is done to accomplish the intent; execute refers rather to the final steps; consummate is limited quite sharply to the concluding act. An officer executes the law when he proceeds against its violators; a purchase is consummated when the money is paid and the property delivered. Execute refers more commonly to the commands of another, effect and consummate to one’s own designs; as, the commander effected the capture of the fort, because his officers and men promptly executed his commands. Achieve — to do something worthy of a chief — signifies always to perform some great and generally some worthy exploit. Perform and accomplish both imply working toward the end; but perform always allows a possibility of not attaining, while accomplish carries the thought of full completion. In Longfellow’s lines, «Patience; accomplish thy labor,» etc., perform could not be substituted without great loss. As between complete and accomplish, complete considers rather the thing as done; accomplish, the whole process of doing it. Commit, as applied to actions, is used only of those that are bad, whether grave or trivial; perpetrate is used chiefly of aggravated crimes or, somewhat humorously, of blunders. A man may commit a sin, a trespass, or a murder; perpetrate an outrage or a felony. We finish a garment or a letter, complete an edifice or a life-work, consummate a bargain or a crime, discharge a duty, effect a purpose, execute a command, fulfil a promise, perform our daily tasks, realize an ideal, accomplish a design, achieve a victory. Compare TRANSACT; TRANSACTION.

    Antonyms:
    baffle, come short, defeat, destroy, fail, frustrate, mar, miscarry, miss, neglect, ruin, spoil

    Synonyms:
    accomplish, achieve, actualize, bring about, bring to pass, carry out, carry through, commit, consummate, discharge, do, effect, execute, finish, fulfil, perform, perpetrate, realize, transact, work out

Complete Dictionary of Synonyms and AntonymsRate these synonyms:2.0 / 1 vote

  1. complete

    Antonyms:
    incomplete, partial, imperfect, unfinished, inadequate

    Synonyms:
    full, perfect, finished, adequate, entire, consummate, total, exhaustive, thorough, accomplished

Princeton’s WordNetRate these antonyms:3.0 / 2 votes

  1. completeadjective

    having every necessary or normal part or component or step

    «a complete meal»; «a complete wardrobe»; «a complete set of the Britannica»; «a complete set of china»; «a complete defeat»; «a complete accounting»

    Antonyms:
    imperfect, unelaborated, incomplete, unfinished, sketchy, half(a), partial, uncompleted, uncomplete, neither, broken, unskilled, mitigated, rudimentary

    Synonyms:
    ended, pure(a), utter(a), unadulterated, thoroughgoing(a), double-dyed(a), consummate, perfect(a), terminated, gross(a), staring(a), arrant(a), all over, stark(a), concluded, consummate(a), everlasting(a), complete(a), accomplished, sodding(a), over(p)

  2. complete, consummateadjective

    perfect and complete in every respect; having all necessary qualities

    «a complete gentleman»; «consummate happiness»; «a consummate performance»

    Antonyms:
    half(a), uncompleted, sketchy, broken, rudimentary, imperfect, mitigated, unelaborated, unskilled, unfinished, neither, incomplete, partial, uncomplete

    Synonyms:
    ended, pure(a), utter(a), unadulterated, thoroughgoing(a), double-dyed(a), consummate, perfect(a), terminated, gross(a), virtuoso(a), staring(a), arrant(a), all over, masterful, stark(a), concluded, consummate(a), complete, everlasting(a), complete(a), accomplished, masterly, sodding(a), over(p)

  3. accomplished, completeadjective

    highly skilled

    «an accomplished pianist»; «a complete musician»

    Antonyms:
    uncompleted, sketchy, imperfect, mitigated, rudimentary, uncomplete, unskilled, incomplete, broken, half(a), neither, partial, unelaborated, unfinished

    Synonyms:
    ended, established, perfect(a), sodding(a), realized, accomplished, thoroughgoing(a), double-dyed(a), consummate, complete(a), effected, utter(a), gross(a), realised, staring(a), arrant(a), all over, stark(a), completed, concluded, consummate(a), complete, everlasting(a), unadulterated, pure(a), over(p), terminated

  4. arrant(a), complete(a), consummate(a), double-dyed(a), everlasting(a), gross(a), perfect(a), pure(a), sodding(a), stark(a), staring(a), thoroughgoing(a), utter(a), unadulteratedadjective

    without qualification; used informally as (often pejorative) intensifiers

    «an arrant fool»; «a complete coward»; «a consummate fool»; «a double-dyed villain»; «gross negligence»; «a perfect idiot»; «pure folly»; «what a sodding mess»; «stark staring mad»; «a thoroughgoing villain»; «utter nonsense»; «the unadulterated truth»

    Antonyms:
    imperfect, mitigated, unskilled, unelaborated, uncompleted, rudimentary, half(a), sketchy, neither, uncomplete, unfinished, partial, broken, incomplete

  5. complete, concluded, ended, over(p), all over, terminatedverb

    having come or been brought to a conclusion

    «the harvesting was complete»; «the affair is over, ended, finished»; «the abruptly terminated interview»

    Antonyms:
    neither, half(a), unelaborated, broken, sketchy, uncomplete, unskilled, imperfect, uncompleted, incomplete, unfinished, rudimentary, partial, mitigated

  6. complete, finishverb

    come or bring to a finish or an end

    «He finished the dishes»; «She completed the requirements for her Master’s Degree»; «The fastest runner finished the race in just over 2 hours; others finished in over 4 hours»

    Antonyms:
    neither, broken, rudimentary, half(a), unelaborated, imperfect, uncomplete, mitigated, partial, sketchy, uncompleted, unfinished, unskilled, incomplete

    Synonyms:
    stop, fill in, wind up, end, finish up, dispatch, finish, eat up, polish off, fill out, terminate, discharge, cease, nail, complete, make out, land up, fetch up, end up

  7. completeverb

    bring to a whole, with all the necessary parts or elements

    «A child would complete the family»

    Antonyms:
    partial, imperfect, sketchy, uncomplete, half(a), rudimentary, mitigated, uncompleted, unfinished, unskilled, neither, unelaborated, incomplete, broken

    Synonyms:
    dispatch, fill in, nail, discharge, finish, make out, fill out

  8. dispatch, discharge, completeverb

    complete or carry out

    «discharge one’s duties»

    Antonyms:
    uncomplete, uncompleted, sketchy, partial, neither, unskilled, broken, mitigated, rudimentary, incomplete, imperfect, half(a), unelaborated, unfinished

    Synonyms:
    unload, empty, dispatch, despatch, complete, expel, exhaust, go off, hit, nail, drop off, release, send off, fill out, finish, fire, polish off, off, fill in, slay, exculpate, assoil, set down, clear, make out, put down, acquit, murder, drop, discharge, exonerate, free, eject, muster out, bump off, remove

  9. complete, nailverb

    complete a pass

    Antonyms:
    unelaborated, incomplete, sketchy, uncomplete, neither, unskilled, half(a), unfinished, rudimentary, uncompleted, broken, partial, imperfect, mitigated

    Synonyms:
    sweep through, fill in, collar, breeze through, dispatch, finish, nail, fill out, discharge, sail through, peg, ace, pass with flying colors, apprehend, nail down, complete, pick up, pinpoint, nab, make out, boom, arrest, cop, blast, smash

  10. complete, fill out, fill in, make outverb

    write all the required information onto a form

    «fill out this questionnaire, please!»; «make out a form»

    Antonyms:
    uncomplete, mitigated, broken, half(a), unfinished, neither, sketchy, incomplete, uncompleted, unskilled, rudimentary, unelaborated, partial, imperfect

    Synonyms:
    tell apart, distinguish, have intercourse, get it on, have a go at it, fatten, dispatch, come, complete, spot, love, be intimate, cut, nail, fat, know, get along, write out, make love, fill out, flesh out, fare, have sex, plump out, plump, sub, grapple, pick out, eff, eke out, round, deal, do it, manage, contend, finish, pad, round out, do, bonk, bed, stand in, fatten out, lie with, fill in, make out, discern, substitute, sleep together, recognize, jazz, sleep with, fatten up, bang, hump, screw, discharge, issue, recognise, have it away, cope, make do, get by, roll in the hay, neck, have it off, get laid, shade

How to use COMPLETE in a sentence?

  1. Ruckett:

    Before everyone stands a image of what he ought to be. So long as he is not that his peace is not complete.

  2. Digital World:

    While we are using our best efforts to complete the business combination as soon as practicable, our board of directors believes there will not be sufficient time before the termination date.

  3. Horace:

    Who then is free? The one who wisely is lord of themselves, who neither poverty, death or captivity terrify, who is strong to resist his appetites and shun honors, and is complete in themselves smooth and round like a globe.

  4. Cornelius Tacitus:

    There can never be a complete confidence in a power which is excessive.

  5. Antonio Weiss:

    This industry remains untested through a complete credit cycle, the new business models were developed in a period of low interest rates, declining unemployment and relatively strong overall credit conditions.

How to pronounce COMPLETE?

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Definitions of Complete

Complete Synonyms

Nearby Words

complement, completed, completion, completely, completeness, completing, completive

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Opposite words of complete

Image search results for Complete

girl, window, railing girl, brick wall, loft concrete wall, loft, girl loft, girl, tenderness joining together, puzzle, silhouette castle, chain lock, u-lock

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Antonyms for Complete. (2016). Retrieved 2023, April 13, from https://thesaurus.plus/antonyms/complete

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Antonyms for Complete. 2016. Accessed April 13, 2023. https://thesaurus.plus/antonyms/complete.

1. complete

verb. [‘kəmˈpliːt’] come or bring to a finish or an end; others finished in over 4 hours».

Antonyms

  • begin
  • unkindness
  • malignancy
  • maleficence
  • immorality
  • malignity
  • undesirability

Synonyms

  • implement
  • finish
  • mop up
  • terminate
  • go through

Etymology

  • complete (English)
  • compleet (Middle English (1100-1500))

2. complete

adjective. [‘kəmˈpliːt’] having every necessary or normal part or component or step.

Antonyms

  • incompleteness
  • fractional
  • incomplete
  • noncomprehensive
  • specific
  • narrow
  • exclusive

Synonyms

  • all-or-nothing
  • comprehensive
  • all
  • good
  • downright

Etymology

  • complete (English)
  • compleet (Middle English (1100-1500))

3. complete

verb. [‘kəmˈpliːt’] bring to a whole, with all the necessary parts or elements.

Antonyms

  • empty
  • unrighteous
  • unworthy
  • wrong

Synonyms

  • fill
  • make full

Etymology

  • complete (English)
  • compleet (Middle English (1100-1500))

4. complete

adjective. [‘kəmˈpliːt’] perfect and complete in every respect; having all necessary qualities.

Antonyms

  • imperfect
  • evil
  • immoral

Synonyms

  • consummate

Etymology

  • complete (English)
  • compleet (Middle English (1100-1500))

5. complete

verb. [‘kəmˈpliːt’] complete or carry out.

Antonyms

  • counterfeit
  • meager
  • disadvantageous
  • unfortunate
  • unhealthful
  • unhealthy
  • nonintellectual

Synonyms

  • fulfill
  • execute
  • accomplish
  • carry out
  • discharge

Etymology

  • complete (English)
  • compleet (Middle English (1100-1500))

6. complete

verb. [‘kəmˈpliːt’] write all the required information onto a form.

Antonyms

  • unworthiness
  • badness
  • unsoundness
  • disadvantage
  • disreputable
  • inoperative
  • unsound

Synonyms

  • fill out
  • set down
  • get down
  • make out
  • put down

Etymology

  • complete (English)
  • compleet (Middle English (1100-1500))

7. complete

verb. [‘kəmˈpliːt’] complete a pass.

Antonyms

  • stale
  • distant
  • inopportune

Synonyms

  • play

Etymology

  • complete (English)
  • compleet (Middle English (1100-1500))

8. complete

adjective. [‘kəmˈpliːt’] having come or been brought to a conclusion.

Antonyms

  • unfinished
  • partly
  • no
  • some
  • disobedient
  • bad
  • worse

Synonyms

  • over
  • finished
  • concluded
  • ended
  • terminated

Etymology

  • complete (English)
  • compleet (Middle English (1100-1500))

9. complete

adjective. [‘kəmˈpliːt’] highly skilled.

Antonyms

  • unskilled
  • evilness
  • wicked

Synonyms

  • accomplished

Etymology

  • complete (English)
  • compleet (Middle English (1100-1500))

10. complete

adjective. [‘kəmˈpliːt’] without qualification; used informally as (often pejorative) intensifiers.

Antonyms

  • mitigated
  • unfavorable
  • unrespectable
  • worst
  • export
  • import
  • natural object

Synonyms

  • utter
  • unadulterated
  • unmitigated
  • pure
  • arrant

Etymology

  • complete (English)
  • compleet (Middle English (1100-1500))

How does the verb complete differ from other similar words?

Some common synonyms of complete are close, conclude, end, finish, and terminate. While all these words mean «to bring or come to a stopping point or limit,» complete implies the removal of all deficiencies or a successful finishing of what has been undertaken.

the resolving of this last issue completes the agreement

Where would close be a reasonable alternative to complete?

The meanings of close and complete largely overlap; however, close usually implies that something has been in some way open as well as unfinished.

In what contexts can conclude take the place of complete?

While the synonyms conclude and complete are close in meaning, conclude may imply a formal closing (as of a meeting).

the service concluded with a blessing

When could end be used to replace complete?

Although the words end and complete have much in common, end conveys a strong sense of finality.

When might finish be a better fit than complete?

The words finish and complete can be used in similar contexts, but finish may stress completion of a final step in a process.

after it is painted, the house will be finished

When would terminate be a good substitute for complete?

In some situations, the words terminate and complete are roughly equivalent. However, terminate implies the setting of a limit in time or space.

your employment terminates after three months

Antonyms for (adj) complete

Main entry: complete

Definition: having every necessary or normal part or component or step

Usage: a complete meal; a complete wardrobe; a complete set of the Britannica; a complete set of china; a complete defeat; a complete accounting

Antonyms: uncomplete, incomplete

Definition: not complete or total; not completed

Antonyms: soil, grime, begrime, bemire, colly, dirty

Definition: make soiled, filthy, or dirty

Antonyms: soiled, dirty, unclean

Definition: soiled or likely to soil with dirt or grime

Antonyms: dirty

Definition: (of behavior or especially language) characterized by obscenity or indecency

Antonyms: contaminating, dirty

Definition: spreading pollution or contamination; especially radioactive contamination

Antonyms: unclean, impure

Definition: having a physical or moral blemish so as to make impure according to dietary or ceremonial laws

Antonyms: evil, evilness

Definition: the quality of being morally wrong in principle or practice

Antonyms: bad, badness

Definition: that which is below standard or expectations as of ethics or decency

Antonyms: bad

Definition: having undesirable or negative qualities

Antonyms: evil

Definition: morally bad or wrong

Antonyms: quiet, silence

Definition: the absence of sound

Antonyms: unsound

Definition: not sound financially

Antonyms: unsound

Definition: not in good condition; damaged or decayed

Antonyms: relative, comparative

Definition: estimated by comparison; not absolute or complete

Antonyms: living

Definition: people who are still living

Antonyms: alive, live

Definition: possessing life

Antonyms: live

Definition: exerting force or containing energy

Antonyms: empty

Definition: holding or containing nothing

Antonyms: thin

Definition: (of sound) lacking resonance or volume

Antonyms: no

Definition: quantifier; used with either mass nouns or plural count nouns for indicating a complete or almost complete lack or zero quantity of

Antonyms: some

Definition: quantifier; used with either mass nouns or plural count nouns to indicate an unspecified number or quantity


Main entry: complete, consummate

Definition: perfect and complete in every respect; having all necessary qualities

Usage: a complete gentleman; consummate happiness; a consummate performance

Antonyms: imperfect

Definition: not perfect; defective or inadequate


Main entry: ended, terminated, all over, over, concluded, complete

Definition: having come or been brought to a conclusion

Usage: the harvesting was complete; the affair is over, ended, finished; the abruptly terminated interview

Antonyms: unfinished

Definition: not brought to an end or conclusion

Antonyms: unfinished

Definition: not brought to the desired final state


Main entry: unadulterated, thoroughgoing, staring, stark, sodding, utter, complete, everlasting, perfect, arrant, pure, gross, consummate, double-dyed

Definition: without qualification; used informally as (often pejorative) intensifiers

Usage: an arrant fool; a complete coward; a consummate fool; a double-dyed villain; gross negligence; a perfect idiot; pure folly; what a sodding mess; stark staring mad; a thoroughgoing villain; utter nonsense; the unadulterated truth

Antonyms: mitigated

Definition: made less severe or intense


Main entry: complete, accomplished

Definition: highly skilled

Usage: an accomplished pianist; a complete musician

Antonyms: unskilled

Definition: not having or showing or requiring special skill or proficiency

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