Head Synonyms and Antonyms

hĕd
The skull
(Noun)
Synonyms:
  1. pate
  2. poll
  3. bean
  4. cranium
  5. crown
  6. noggin
  7. capitulum
  8. caput
  9. noddle
  10. noodle
  11. nut
  12. brainpan
  13. scalp
  14. brain box
  15. headpiece
  16. pow (Scotch)
  17. coconut
  18. nob
  19. loaf (British)
  20. culminate
  21. reach a crisis
  22. come to a climax
  23. learn
  24. comprehend
  25. see
  26. permit
  27. condone
  28. approve
  29. stir mentally
  30. stimulate
  31. intoxicate
  32. make one arrogant
  33. repent
  34. be sorry
  35. be ashamed
  36. grieve
  37. remain calm
  38. keep one's self-control
  39. hold one's emotions in check
  40. become excited
  41. block
  42. get angry
  43. go-mad
  44. cephalon
  45. rave
  46. make-headway
  47. progress
  48. go forward
  49. proceed
  50. conk
  51. apprehend
  52. greatly
  53. costard (contemptuous)
  54. extremely
  55. considerably
  56. burdensome
  57. taxing
  58. dome
  59. strenuous
  60. crazy
  61. delirious
  62. raving
  63. incomprehensible
  64. not understandable
  65. hard
  66. consult
  67. talk over
  68. confer
  69. conceive
  70. concoct
  71. devise
  72. hydrol
  73. skull
Antonyms:
  1. foot
The seat of the faculty of intelligence and reason
(Noun)
The beginning
(Noun)
Stored power
(Noun)
Synonyms:
  1. latent force
  2. static energy
  3. potential-energy
An attachment
(Noun)
Antonyms:
  1. tail
A headline
(Noun)
*A drug user
(Noun)
Synonyms:
  1. hippie
  2. acidhead
  3. pothead
To move (a weapon or blow, for example) in the direction of someone or something
(Verb)
The part in the front or nearest the viewer
(Noun)
Synonyms:
  1. forefront
(grammar) the word in a grammatical constituent that plays the same grammatical role as the whole constituent
(Noun)
Synonyms:
  1. head word
(computer science) a tiny electromagnetic coil and metal pole used to write and read magnetic patterns on a disk
(Noun)
Synonyms:
  1. read/write head

Words Related to Head

Related words are words that are directly connected to each other through their meaning, even if they are not synonyms or antonyms. This connection may be general or specific, or the words may appear frequently together.