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View synonyms for maintain
maintain
[ meyn-teyn ]
verb (used with object)
to maintain good relations with neighboring countries.
Antonyms: discontinue
- to keep in an appropriate condition, operation, or force; keep unimpaired:
to maintain order; to maintain public highways.
Synonyms: keep up
- to keep in a specified state, position, etc.:
to maintain a correct posture; to maintain good health.
He maintained that the country was going downhill.
Synonyms: asseverate
- to support in speech or argument, as a statement or proposition.
Synonyms: justify, vindicate, defend, uphold
Antonyms: contradict
- to keep or hold against attack:
to maintain one's ground.
- to provide for the upkeep or support of; carry the expenses of:
to maintain a family.
- to sustain or support:
not enough water to maintain life.
maintain
/ meɪnˈteɪn /
verb
- to continue or retain; keep in existence
- to keep in proper or good condition
to maintain a building
- to support a style of living
the money maintained us for a month
- takes a clause as object to state or assert
he maintained that Talbot was wrong
- to defend against contradiction; uphold
she maintained her innocence
- to defend against physical attack
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Derived Forms
- mainˈtainer, noun
- mainˈtainable, adjective
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Other Words From
- main·taina·ble adjective
- main·taina·bili·ty noun
- main·tainer noun
- premain·tain verb (used with object)
- self-main·tained adjective
- self-main·taining adjective
- under·main·tain verb (used with object)
- under·main·tained adjective
- unmain·taina·ble adjective
- unmain·tained adjective
- well-main·tained adjective
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Word History and Origins
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Word History and Origins
Origin of maintain1
C13: from Old French maintenir, ultimately from Latin manū tenēre to hold in the hand
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Synonym Study
Maintain, assert, aver, allege, hold, state all mean to express an opinion, judgment, or position. Maintain carries the implications of both firmness and persistence in declaring or supporting a conviction: She maintained her client's innocence even in the face of damaging evidence. Assert suggests assurance, confidence, and sometimes aggressiveness in the effort to persuade others to agree with or accept one's position: He asserted again and again the government's right to control the waterway. Aver, like assert, implies confident declaration and sometimes suggests a firmly positive or peremptory tone; in legal use aver means “to allege as fact”: to aver that the evidence is incontrovertible. Allege indicates a statement without evidence to support it, and thus can imply doubt as to the validity or accuracy of an assertion: The official is alleged to have been unaware of the crime. Hold means simply to have or express a conviction or belief: We hold these truths to be self-evident; She held that her rights had been violated. State usually suggests a declaration that is forthright and unambiguous: He stated his reasons in clear, simple language.
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