Thesaurus Dictionary
Synonyms and antonyms of Ways of life in British Thesaurus
Ways of life
life (noun)
your particular way of living and the experiences that you have
way of life (noun)
a way of living without all the possessions and worries of modern life
counterculture (noun)
a way of life and set of attitudes that is deliberately different from the main culture in society
a society in which the government controls everything, even people’s behaviour
living standards (noun)
the way in which people live, for example how comfortable their houses are or how much money they have to spend on food and clothes
modus vivendi (noun)
formal an arrangement that helps people who have very different opinions to live or work together
commensalism (noun)
a situation in which two species live together in a way that is helpful to one species and not harmful to the other
the exciting busy way of life that a successful person has
flat share (noun)
British a situation in which two or more people share a flat
flower power (noun)
the idea that war is wrong, that love is important, and that money and possessions are not important. This word was used especially about the ideas of hippies in the 1960s and 1970s.
living (noun)
a particular type of life
suburbia (noun)
suburbs in general, the people who live in them, or their way of life
work-life balance (noun)
the relationship between the amount of time and effort that someone gives to work and the amount that they give to other aspects of life, such as their family