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All justify antonyms

jus·ti·fy
J j

verb justify

  • attack — To attack a person or place means to try to hurt or damage them using physical violence.
  • condemn — If you condemn something, you say that it is very bad and unacceptable.
  • contradict — If you contradict someone, you say that what they have just said is wrong, or suggest that it is wrong by saying something different.
  • deny — When you deny something, you state that it is not true.
  • desert — A desert is a large area of land, usually in a hot region, where there is almost no water, rain, trees, or plants.
  • disapprove — to think (something) wrong or reprehensible; censure or condemn in opinion.
  • neglect — to pay no attention or too little attention to; disregard or slight: The public neglected his genius for many years.
  • oppose — to act against or provide resistance to; combat.
  • refuse — to decline to accept (something offered): to refuse an award.
  • reject — to refuse to have, take, recognize, etc.: to reject the offer of a better job.
  • veto — the power or right vested in one branch of a government to cancel or postpone the decisions, enactments, etc., of another branch, especially the right of a president, governor, or other chief executive to reject bills passed by the legislature.
  • accuse — If you accuse someone of doing something wrong or dishonest, you say or tell them that you believe that they did it.
  • blame — If you blame a person or thing for something bad, you believe or say that they are responsible for it or that they caused it.
  • charge — If you charge someone an amount of money, you ask them to pay that amount for something that you have sold to them or done for them.
  • convict — If someone is convicted of a crime, they are found guilty of that crime in a law court.
  • damn — Damn, damn it, and dammit are used by some people to express anger or impatience.
  • disagree — to fail to agree; differ: The conclusions disagree with the facts. The theories disagree in their basic premises.
  • disprove — to prove (an assertion, claim, etc.) to be false or wrong; refute; invalidate: I disproved his claim.
  • incriminate — to accuse of or present proof of a crime or fault: He incriminated both men to the grand jury.
  • invalidate — to render invalid; discredit.
  • punish — to subject to pain, loss, confinement, death, etc., as a penalty for some offense, transgression, or fault: to punish a criminal.
  • sentence — Grammar. a grammatical unit of one or more words that expresses an independent statement, question, request, command, exclamation, etc., and that typically has a subject as well as a predicate, as in John is here. or Is John here? In print or writing, a sentence typically begins with a capital letter and ends with appropriate punctuation; in speech it displays recognizable, communicative intonation patterns and is often marked by preceding and following pauses.
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