No. Despite is a preposition. (It was previously used like the word spite as both a noun and verb.)
Another word is but
another word for very large
another word for the word suffice is- be enough
Suggestion is another word for proposal answer: engagement?
even so in spite of that regardless still
"Despite of" is not a grammatically correct phrase. Perhaps you mean "In spite of" or simply "Despite." "In spite of" is an alternate for "Despite".
No, "in spite" is two words.
He went out of his way to embarrass her in spite of their past friendship.
Yes the word spite is a noun. It is an uncountable noun.
You didn't specify which meaning of the word, so here are a couple. In spite of the rain, we enjoyed our day out. He said that just to spite me.
One... just in case you donβt know what monosyllabic means
nevertheless
Despite
death
persevere
vindictive