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Looking for synonyms for "swap"? Browse alternatives ranked by relevance — sharper word choices for fiction, poetry, and copywriting.
(n)
An exchange of goods or services without the use of money.
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Something which is offered or asked for in exchange for something else.
(uncountable) The buying and selling of goods and services on a market.
A fusion of swing and hip-hop dance styles.
A device to turn electric current on and off or direct its flow.
An act of exchanging or trading.
barter
(v)
(transitive) To use in place of something else, with the same function.
property used as part payment for a new purchase
(adj)
Carrying on trade or commerce; engaged in trade.
The act by which something is shared.
To give part of what one has to somebody else to use or consume.
(transitive) to mutually give and receive (something); to exchange
Freely substitutable; that may be swapped at will.
The characteristic of being reciprocal, e.g. of a relationship between people.
That can be swapped.
(religion) Salvation from sin.
The quality of being interchangeable.
(transitive) To supply or substitute an equivalent with.
The act of converting something or someone.
(US, nonstandard) The process or habit of journeying to and from work on a regular basis; commuting.
(intransitive) To become something different.
Capable of being switched.
Change; alteration.
(transitive) To transform or change (something) into another form, substance, state, or product.
Pertaining to or by agency of mobile phones.
Of or pertaining to a sector (all senses).
Opposite, contrary; going in the opposite direction.
Any situation in which the quality or quantity of one thing must be decreased for another to be increased.
(countable) A difference between two objects, people or concepts.
(intransitive) To spin, turn, or revolve.
(uncountable) Initialism of educational television.
One of the ways something exists, or the ways a set of objects can be ordered.
(US, military) Abbreviation of private (“soldier”). [A soldier of the lowest rank in the army.]
The act or process of something that switches.
To alternate between two positions using a single switch or lever.
A movement to do something, a beginning.
(by extension) The mutual exchange of ideas or concepts from different fields for mutual benefit.
(transitive) To trade or barter.
(ambitransitive) To put in a random order.
(transitive) To move or pass from one place, person or thing to another.
(transitive) To reverse or change the order of (two or more things); to swap or interchange.
A maneuver which rotates an object end over end.
Happening by turns; one following the other in succession of time or place; first one and then the other (repeatedly).
(intransitive, mathematics) To commute; to be invariant under a reversal of the positions of operands.
(transitive) To exchange two things, with both parties giving one thing and taking another thing.
(transitive or intransitive) To exchange or swap one (person, thing, etc.) for another.
(ambitransitive) To exchange (something or someone) for an unused (or less-used) equivalent.
(intransitive, with between or among) To choose among options, where having them all at once is not an available option.
(intransitive) To conduct business.
(transitive, ditransitive, intransitive) To transfer goods or provide services in exchange for money.
To exchange positions (with another)
(transitive) To trade more or better than.
(idiomatic) To become the property of someone else; to be bought or sold.
(obsolete) To transform, transmute.
(ditransitive) To move, shift, provide something abstract or concrete to someone or something or somewhere.
(formal, transitive) To turn to another course or use.
(transitive, business) To generate (a certain amount of money from sales).
The act of returning.
(transitive, with in as preposition) To trade (buy and sell) a named commodity.
(transitive) To designate or set apart (something) for some purpose.
(intransitive) To trade with each other; to engage in mutual trading.
(transitive) To make transactional; to make into a transaction or exchange.
(transitive) To transfer something from one vessel or conveyance to another for onward shipment.
(transitive) To reestablish, or bring back into existence.
To sell something and replace it with something more expensive.
(idiomatic, transitive) To pass or transfer.
(transitive) To transfer goods from one ship or other conveyance to another.
(transitive) To advocate or urge on behalf of (something or someone); to attempt to popularize or sell by means of advertising or publicity.
(transitive) To repay (a debt owed); specifically, to recompense or reward someone for (a favour, a service rendered, etc.)
(intransitive) To confer with others in order to come to terms or reach an agreement.
(ambitransitive) To change or convert one thing to another, or from one state or form to another.
(grammar, transitive) To make reciprocal.
(intransitive) To join in, to take part, to involve oneself (in something).
Senses relating to the change of information, etc., from one form to another.
(countable) An amount of something supplied.
(ambitransitive) To convert again, convert back.
(transitive) To substitute again.
(transitive) To change the bread and wine of the Eucharist into the body and blood of Jesus.
(transitive, medicine) To administer a transfusion of.
The result of copying; an identical or nearly identical duplicate of an original.
(uncountable) The state of being hired, or having a job; employment.
(often followed by of) An indefinite quantity or amount; a lot (now usually qualified by great or good).
(transitive) To share about; share across or share with; distribute among others; share.
(transitive, idiomatic) to convert to, to make a transition from one system to another
(archaic, transitive) To change, convert
(transitive) To transfer (a shipment) from one mode of transportation to another.
(sports, transitive) To introduce (a substitute) into the game.
(transitive) To transmute again.
The part of an object which is (designed to be) held in the hand when used or moved.
(transitive) To save, rescue.
(transitive) To barter again.
(transitive) To change greatly the appearance or form of.
(law, transitive) To replace one person or thing with another.
An improved component or replacement item, usually applied to technology.
Synonym of pay back in all senses.