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Synonyms for Extra time. (2016). Retrieved 2023, April 14, from https://thesaurus.plus/synonyms/extra_time
Synonyms for Extra time. N.p., 2016. Web. 14 Apr. 2023. <https://thesaurus.plus/synonyms/extra_time>.
Synonyms for Extra time. 2016. Accessed April 14, 2023. https://thesaurus.plus/synonyms/extra_time.
Princeton’s WordNetRate this synonym:0.0 / 0 votes
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overtime, extra timenoun
playing time beyond regulation, to break a tie
Synonyms:
overtime
How to pronounce extra time?
How to say extra time in sign language?
Words popularity by usage frequency
ranking | word | |
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#11417 | overtime |
How to use extra time in a sentence?
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Mike Young:
He would get up at five o’clock in the morning to get on the first flight to go back to his wife and get home, not me, I’d go on the third flight. He’d be on the first flight out, get home, get back to Kelly and just live his life. He didn’t want to spend any extra time. He really valued his time. There was no loose time with him, which is a really impressive thing – it’s a lesson I take from him.
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Lisa Leake:
Since schooling from home doesn’t take as long as going in-person, Kristi King can use the extra time to add an important life skill to Kristi King child’s curriculum — cooking in the kitchen !
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Eric Williams:
He told me he had to shoot her an extra time because she was still moaning.
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Huaiyu Tian:
This delay provided extra time to prepare for the arrival of COVID-19 in more than 130 cities.
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Eric Berger:
Fortunately, we had some wonderful people who put in extra time, it’s been stressful, but I think we did the right thing.
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Are we missing a good synonym for extra time?
1. part-time
adjective. [‘ˈpɑːrtˈtaɪm’] involving less than the standard or customary time for an activity.
Synonyms
- odd-job
- half-time
- temporary
- parttime
- underemployed
Antonyms
- legal
- irregularity
- systematic
- regular
Rhymes with Extra Time
- clothestime
- anticrime
- part-time
- sublime
- onetime
- slime
- prime
- grime
- crime
- climb
- thyme
- syme
- sime
- seim
- rhyme
- mime
- lyme
- lime
- kime
- hime
- heim
- haim
- dime
- chime
- beim
- i’m
Sentences with extra-time
1. Noun Phrase
This gives you a little extra time to plan the details of the trip.
2. extra
adjective. [‘ˈɛkstrə’] more than is needed, desired, or required.
Synonyms
- redundant
- spare
- surplus
- excess
- superfluous
- unnecessary
- supernumerary
- unneeded
Antonyms
- adorned
- act
- take
- enforce
3. time
noun. [‘ˈtaɪm’] an instance or single occasion for some event.
Synonyms
- example
- clip
- case
Antonyms
- shortness
- permanence
- long
- impermanence
Etymology
- time (Middle English (1100-1500))
4. time
noun. [‘ˈtaɪm’] a period of time considered as a resource under your control and sufficient to accomplish something.
Synonyms
- period
- time period
Antonyms
- insignificance
- inconsequence
- unspell
Etymology
- time (Middle English (1100-1500))
5. time
noun. [‘ˈtaɪm’] an indefinite period (usually marked by specific attributes or activities).
Synonyms
- while
- moment
- incarnation
- spell
- dead
- patch
- piece
- wee
- minute
- mo
- ephemera
- bit
- hard times
- time period
- space age
- second
- period of time
- day
Antonyms
- presentness
- pastness
- present
- outgoing
Etymology
- time (Middle English (1100-1500))
6. time
noun. [‘ˈtaɪm’] a suitable moment.
Synonyms
- minute
- second
- moment
- high time
- occasion
Antonyms
- uptime
- day
- night
- middle
Etymology
- time (Middle English (1100-1500))
7. time
noun. [‘ˈtaɪm’] the continuum of experience in which events pass from the future through the present to the past.
Synonyms
- universal time
- eternity
- local time
- attribute
- UT
- daylight-saving time
- present
- duration
- standard time
- Greenwich Time
- infinity
- daylight savings
- past times
- daylight-savings time
- musical time
- UT1
- biological time
- daylight saving
- civil time
- time to come
- nowadays
- geological time
- continuum
- GMT
- geologic time
- hereafter
- cosmic time
- futurity
- yesteryear
- future
- past
- continuance
Antonyms
- past
- nonbeing
- nonexistence
- cheerfulness
Etymology
- time (Middle English (1100-1500))
8. time
noun. [‘ˈtaɪm’] a person’s experience on a particular occasion.
Antonyms
- take
Etymology
- time (Middle English (1100-1500))
9. time
noun. [‘ˈtaɪm’] a reading of a point in time as given by a clock.
Synonyms
- SCLK
- clock time
- meter reading
- hour
- prime time
- antemeridian
- reading
- postmeridian
- indication
- time of day
Antonyms
- antemeridian
- retrospective
- new
- incoming
Etymology
- time (Middle English (1100-1500))
10. time
noun. [‘ˈtaɪm’] the fourth coordinate that is required (along with three spatial dimensions) to specify a physical event.
Synonyms
- dimension
Antonyms
- inactivity
- discontinuance
Etymology
- time (Middle English (1100-1500))