Ces exercices vous permettent de pratiquer les quatre grandes catégories d’antonymes avancés étudiées dans le cours. Testez votre capacité à les distinguer et à les employer avec précision.
→ Voir le cours : Les antonymes avancés en anglais : cours complet
Exercice 1 — Identifier la relation antonyme
Choisissez la réponse qui décrit correctement la relation entre les deux mots en gras, selon les catégories vues dans le cours.
- What type of antonym pair is illustrated by 'lend' and 'borrow'?
- Which statement best explains why 'hot' and 'cold' are considered gradable antonyms?
- Which pair best exemplifies complementary antonyms as defined in the course?
- The word 'irrelevant' is formed from 'relevant'. Which category of antonym does this illustrate?
Correction
- C) Reciprocal antonyms, because each word implies the existence of the other.
- A) They are gradable antonyms, because they exist on a scale and allow for intermediate degrees such as warm or cool.
- C) 'Alive' and 'dead', because the two states are mutually exclusive with no possible intermediate.
- D) Prefix antonyms, because 'irrelevant' is derived from 'relevant' by adding a negative prefix.
Exercice 2 — Associer chaque mot à son antonyme avancé
Associez chaque mot de la colonne de gauche à l'antonyme le plus précis de la colonne de droite, en tenant compte de la catégorie d'antonyme correspondante vue dans le cours.
- Match 'employer' with its correct reciprocal antonym from the course.
- Match 'legible' with the prefix antonym that correctly expresses its opposite.
- Match 'satisfied' with its most precise gradable antonym, acknowledging the spectrum of emotion.
- Match 'mortal' with the complementary antonym that leaves no intermediate state possible.
Correction
- 'Employer' is correctly matched with 'employee', because they form a reciprocal antonym pair where each role presupposes the other.
- 'Legible' is correctly matched with 'illegible', because the negative prefix 'il-' is the standard form used before roots beginning with 'l'.
- 'Satisfied' is correctly matched with 'dissatisfied', because both words occupy opposite ends of a gradable emotional scale.
- 'Mortal' is correctly matched with 'immortal', because the two terms are complementary antonyms representing mutually exclusive states of existence.
Exercice 3 — Compléter avec l'antonyme avancé approprié
Complétez chaque phrase avec l'antonyme exact du mot indiqué entre parenthèses, en choisissant la forme correcte selon le type d'antonyme étudié dans le cours.
- The professor's explanation was so ___ (clear) that none of the students could follow the argument, no matter how carefully they listened. (Use a prefix antonym of 'clear'.)
- In a healthy mentor relationship, the mentor ___ (learns from) the mentee by sharing expertise, while the mentee acquires new skills in return. (Use the reciprocal antonym of 'learns from'.)
- The temperature in the laboratory must remain neither too warm nor too cool, so scientists describe it as ___ (hot) rather than cold, using a gradable intermediate term.
- Once a species is officially declared ___ (alive), no conservation efforts can reverse that status, making it a complementary antonym with no middle ground.
Correction
- The professor's explanation was so unclear that none of the students could follow the argument, no matter how carefully they listened.
- In a healthy mentor relationship, the mentor teaches the mentee by sharing expertise, while the mentee acquires new skills in return.
- The temperature in the laboratory must remain neither too warm nor too cool, so scientists describe it as lukewarm rather than cold, using a gradable intermediate term.
- Once a species is officially declared extinct, no conservation efforts can reverse that status, making it a complementary antonym with no middle ground.
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