Emoji
|
Word | Meaning | Example Sentence | Synonyms | Antonyms | Collocations |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
#1201
🔄
|
Revolution
/ˌrevəˈluːʃən/
noun
••••••
|
a dramatic and wide-reaching change in conditions, attitudes, or operation; a forcible overthrow of a government or social order
••••••
|
The industrial revolution changed the way people lived and worked. |
upheaval, transformation, rebellion, revolt
••••••
|
stability, conservation, tradition
••••••
|
industrial revolution, political revolution, scientific revolution
••••••
|
#1202
🔄
|
Rotation
/roʊˈteɪʃən/
noun
••••••
|
the action of rotating around an axis or center; a single turn
••••••
|
The Earth's rotation takes 24 hours to complete. |
turning, spinning, revolution, orbit
••••••
|
stillness, stability, stagnation
••••••
|
crop rotation, job rotation, axis of rotation
••••••
|
#1203
🧩
|
Riddle
/ˈrɪdəl/
noun
••••••
|
a question or statement intentionally phrased so as to require ingenuity in ascertaining its answer or meaning; a puzzle
••••••
|
The ancient riddle stumped all the scholars for years. |
puzzle, enigma, mystery, brain teaser
••••••
|
solution, answer, explanation
••••••
|
solve a riddle, ancient riddle, riddle me this
••••••
|
#1204
🗑️
|
Rubbish
/ˈrʌbɪʃ/
noun
••••••
|
waste material; refuse or litter; nonsense or worthless things
••••••
|
Please throw the rubbish in the bin. |
garbage, trash, waste, junk
••••••
|
treasure, valuable, precious
••••••
|
household rubbish, rubbish bin, rubbish collection
••••••
|
#1205
🔒
|
Rigidity
/rɪˈdʒɪdəti/
noun
••••••
|
inability to bend or be forced out of shape; unwillingness to change or compromise
••••••
|
The rigidity of the old system prevented any innovation. |
stiffness, inflexibility, strictness, firmness
••••••
|
flexibility, adaptability, elasticity
••••••
|
mental rigidity, structural rigidity, rigidity of rules
••••••
|
#1206
👥
|
Ruck
/rʌk/
noun
••••••
|
a situation where a crowd of people are pushing against each other; a disorderly crowd
••••••
|
There was a ruck at the football match. |
scuffle, fight, brawl, melee
••••••
|
peace, order, calm
••••••
|
rugby ruck, ruck and maul, ruck formation
••••••
|
#1207
🔥
|
Riot
/ˈraɪət/
noun
••••••
|
a violent disturbance of the peace by a crowd; an uncontrolled outburst
••••••
|
The peaceful protest turned into a riot when violence broke out. |
uprising, disturbance, unrest, rebellion
••••••
|
peace, order, calm, tranquility
••••••
|
riot police, food riot, prison riot
••••••
|
#1208
😤
|
Rudeness
/ˈruːdnəs/
noun
••••••
|
the quality of being impolite, discourteous, or offensive in behavior or speech
••••••
|
His rudeness shocked everyone at the dinner party. |
impoliteness, discourtesy, incivility, bad manners
••••••
|
politeness, courtesy, civility, respect
••••••
|
shocking rudeness, deliberate rudeness, inexcusable rudeness
••••••
|
#1209
🌊
|
Ripple
/ˈrɪpəl/
noun
••••••
|
a small wave on the surface of water; a spreading effect or influence
••••••
|
The stone created ripples across the calm pond. |
wave, undulation, effect, consequence
••••••
|
stillness, calm, smoothness
••••••
|
ripple effect, water ripple, ripple through
••••••
|
#1210
😈
|
Ruffian
/ˈrʌfiən/
noun
••••••
|
a violent person, especially one involved in crime; a brutal or lawless person
••••••
|
The ruffian threatened the shopkeeper for money. |
thug, hooligan, criminal, villain
••••••
|
gentleman, saint, hero, protector
••••••
|
street ruffian, common ruffian, dangerous ruffian
••••••
|
#1211
⚠️
|
Risk
/rɪsk/
noun
••••••
|
a situation involving exposure to danger; the possibility of something bad happening
••••••
|
Taking this investment carries a high risk of losing money. |
danger, hazard, peril, threat
••••••
|
safety, security, certainty
••••••
|
high risk, take a risk, risk assessment
••••••
|
#1212
🗣️
|
Rumour
/ˈruːmər/
noun
••••••
|
a currently circulating story or report of uncertain or doubtful truth; gossip
••••••
|
There's a rumour that the company will close next month. |
gossip, hearsay, speculation, whisper
••••••
|
fact, truth, certainty, confirmation
••••••
|
spread rumour, false rumour, rumour mill
••••••
|
#1213
🥊
|
Rival
/ˈraɪvəl/
noun
••••••
|
a person or thing competing with another for the same objective or for superiority in the same field
••••••
|
The two companies have been business rivals for decades. |
competitor, opponent, adversary, challenger
••••••
|
ally, partner, friend, supporter
••••••
|
business rival, fierce rival, political rival
••••••
|
#1214
🔊
|
Rumpus
/ˈrʌmpəs/
noun
••••••
|
a noisy disturbance; an uproar or commotion
••••••
|
The children caused quite a rumpus in the playground. |
commotion, uproar, disturbance, tumult
••••••
|
quiet, peace, calm, silence
••••••
|
cause rumpus, raise rumpus, rumpus room
••••••
|
#1215
⚔️
|
Rivalry
/ˈraɪvəlri/
noun
••••••
|
competition for the same objective or for superiority in the same field; the state of being rivals
••••••
|
The rivalry between the two teams made the match exciting. |
competition, contest, conflict, antagonism
••••••
|
cooperation, alliance, friendship
••••••
|
fierce rivalry, sibling rivalry, sporting rivalry
••••••
|
#1216
🎭
|
Ruse
/ruːz/
noun
••••••
|
an action intended to deceive someone; a trick or stratagem
••••••
|
The thief used a clever ruse to distract the guard. |
trick, deception, stratagem, ploy
••••••
|
honesty, truth, straightforwardness
••••••
|
clever ruse, elaborate ruse, fall for ruse
••••••
|
#1217
💕
|
Romance
/roʊˈmæns/
noun
••••••
|
a feeling of excitement and mystery associated with love; a love affair or relationship
••••••
|
Their romance began when they met at the university library. |
love affair, courtship, passion, relationship
••••••
|
hatred, indifference, platonic friendship
••••••
|
office romance, summer romance, whirlwind romance
••••••
|
#1218
🍪
|
Rusk
/rʌsk/
noun
••••••
|
a hard, dry biscuit or twice-baked bread; a type of crisp, sweet biscuit
••••••
|
The baby enjoyed eating the soft rusk with milk. |
biscuit, cracker, zwieback, hardtack
••••••
|
soft bread, fresh bread, moist cake
••••••
|
baby rusk, tea rusk, rusk crumbs
••••••
|
#1219
🌱
|
Root
/ruːt/
noun
••••••
|
the part of a plant that grows underground; the basic cause, source, or origin of something
••••••
|
We need to find the root of this problem to solve it permanently. |
source, origin, basis, foundation
••••••
|
branch, leaf, effect, result
••••••
|
root cause, tree root, root of the problem
••••••
|
#1220
🏃
|
Rush
/rʌʃ/
noun
••••••
|
a sudden quick movement toward something; a period of great activity or demand; hurry
••••••
|
There was a rush to buy tickets for the concert. |
hurry, haste, urgency, dash
••••••
|
delay, calm, leisure, slowness
••••••
|
rush hour, gold rush, adrenaline rush
••••••
|