Synonyms/Hypernyms (Ordered by Estimated Frequency) of verb receive
13 senses of receive
Sense 1
receive, have -- (get something; come into possession of; "receive payment"; "receive a gift"; "receive letters from the front")
=> get, acquire -- (come into the possession of something concrete or abstract; "She got a lot of paintings from her uncle"; "They acquired a new pet"; "Get your results the next day"; "Get permission to take a few days off from work")
Sense 2
receive, get, find, obtain, incur -- (receive a specified treatment (abstract); "These aspects of civilization do not find expression or receive an interpretation"; "His movie received a good review"; "I got nothing but trouble for my good intentions")
=> change -- (undergo a change; become different in essence; losing one's or its original nature; "She changed completely as she grew older"; "The weather changed last night")
Sense 3
pick up, receive -- (register (perceptual input); "pick up a signal")
=> perceive, comprehend -- (to become aware of through the senses; "I could perceive the ship coming over the horizon")
Sense 4
experience, receive, have, get -- (go through (mental or physical states or experiences); "get an idea"; "experience vertigo"; "get nauseous"; "receive injuries"; "have a feeling")
=> undergo -- (pass through; "The chemical undergoes a sudden change"; "The fluid undergoes shear"; "undergo a strange sensation")
Sense 5
receive, take in, invite -- (express willingness to have in one's home or environs; "The community warmly received the refugees")
Sense 6
receive -- (accept as true or valid; "He received Christ")
=> accept -- (consider or hold as true; "I cannot accept the dogma of this church"; "accept an argument")
Sense 7
welcome, receive -- (bid welcome to; greet upon arrival)
=> greet, recognize, recognise -- (express greetings upon meeting someone)
Sense 8
receive -- (convert into sounds or pictures; "receive the incoming radio signals")
=> convert -- (change the nature, purpose, or function of something; "convert lead into gold"; "convert hotels into jails"; "convert slaves to laborers")
Sense 9
meet, encounter, receive -- (experience as a reaction; "My proposal met with much opposition")
=> have, experience -- (undergo; "The stocks had a fast run-up")
Sense 10
receive -- (have or give a reception; "The lady is receiving Sunday morning")
=> celebrate, fete -- (have a celebration; "They were feting the patriarch of the family"; "After the exam, the students were celebrating")
Sense 11
get, receive -- (receive as a retribution or punishment; "He got 5 years in prison")
Sense 12
receive -- (partake of the Holy Eucharist sacrament)
=> partake, touch -- (consume; "She didn't touch her food all night")
Sense 13
receive -- (regard favorably or with disapproval; "Her new collection of poems was not well received")
=> see, consider, reckon, view, regard -- (deem to be; "She views this quite differently from me"; "I consider her to be shallow"; "I don't see the situation quite as negatively as you do")
Antonyms of adj received
2 senses of received
Sense 1
standard (vs. nonstandard), received -- (conforming to the established language usage of educated native speakers; "standard English" (American); "received standard English is sometimes called the King's English" (British))
Sense 2
received -- (widely accepted as true or worthy; "a received moral idea"; "Received political wisdom says not; surveys show otherwise"- Economist)
INDIRECT (VIA conventional) -> unconventional -- (not conforming to accepted rules or standards; "her unconventional dress and hair style")
INDIRECT (VIA conventional, conventional) -> unconventional -- (not conventional or conformist; "unconventional life styles")
Similarity of adj received
2 senses of received
Sense 1
standard (vs. nonstandard), received -- (conforming to the established language usage of educated native speakers; "standard English" (American); "received standard English is sometimes called the King's English" (British))
=> acceptable -- (judged to be in conformity with approved usage; "acceptable English usage")
=> classical -- ((language) having the form used by ancient standard authors; "classical Greek)
Sense 2
received -- (widely accepted as true or worthy; "a received moral idea"; "Received political wisdom says not; surveys show otherwise"- Economist)
=> conventional (vs. unconventional) (vs. unconventional) -- (following accepted customs and proprieties; "conventional wisdom"; "she had strayed from the path of conventional behavior"; "conventional forms of address")