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All repudiate synonyms

re·pu·di·ate
R r

verb repudiate

  • change one's mind — to alter one's decision or opinion
  • welch — welsh.
  • give up — the quality or state of being resilient; springiness.
  • disaffirm — to deny; contradict.
  • forget it — certainly not
  • counterpoised — a counterbalancing weight.
  • nixing — nothing.
  • overdrawn — Past participle of overdraw.
  • have no use for — to employ for some purpose; put into service; make use of: to use a knife.
  • exclude — Deny (someone) access to or bar (someone) from a place, group, or privilege.
  • kiss off — an act or instance of kissing.
  • detest — If you detest someone or something, you dislike them very much.
  • breaching — the act or a result of breaking; break or rupture.
  • defalcate — to misuse or misappropriate property or funds entrusted to one
  • hold off — to have or keep in the hand; keep fast; grasp: She held the purse in her right hand. He held the child's hand in his.
  • abolish — If someone in authority abolishes a system or practice, they formally put an end to it.
  • lay aside — to put or place in a horizontal position or position of rest; set down: to lay a book on a desk.
  • go belly up — the front or under part of a vertebrate body from the breastbone to the pelvis, containing the abdominal viscera; the abdomen.
  • close down — to cease or cause to cease operations
  • infract — to break, violate, or infringe (a law, commitment, etc.).
  • let slide — to move along in continuous contact with a smooth or slippery surface: to slide down a snow-covered hill.
  • call in question — a sentence in an interrogative form, addressed to someone in order to get information in reply.
  • decline — If something declines, it becomes less in quantity, importance, or strength.
  • outplace — to provide outplacement for.
  • disconfirming — Not confirming.
  • brush off — If someone brushes you off when you speak to them, they refuse to talk to you or be nice to you.
  • excurse — To journey or pass through.
  • infracted — to break, violate, or infringe (a law, commitment, etc.).
  • adios — goodbye; farewell
  • disallow — to refuse to allow; reject; veto: to disallow a claim for compensation.
  • disestablish — to deprive of the character of being established; cancel; abolish.
  • blot out — If one thing blots out another thing, it is in front of the other thing and prevents it from being seen.
  • drop — a small quantity of liquid that falls or is produced in a more or less spherical mass; a liquid globule.
  • go up — to move or proceed, especially to or from something: They're going by bus.
  • burn down — If a building burns down or if someone burns it down, it is completely destroyed by fire.
  • forsake — to quit or leave entirely; abandon; desert: She has forsaken her country for an island in the South Pacific.
  • contravene — To contravene a law or rule means to do something that is forbidden by the law or rule.
  • forswear — to reject or renounce under oath: to forswear an injurious habit.
  • go broke — a simple past tense of break.
  • go bust — If a company goes bust, it loses so much money that it is forced to close down.
  • beat off — to drive back; repel
  • lock out — a device for securing a door, gate, lid, drawer, or the like in position when closed, consisting of a bolt or system of bolts propelled and withdrawn by a mechanism operated by a key, dial, etc.
  • disconfirm — to prove to be invalid.
  • abjure — If you abjure something such as a belief or way of life, you state publicly that you will give it up or that you reject it.
  • misprize — to despise; undervalue; slight; scorn.
  • offing — the state or fact of being off.
  • withdraw — to draw back, away, or aside; take back; remove: She withdrew her hand from his. He withdrew his savings from the bank.
  • eat one's words — a unit of language, consisting of one or more spoken sounds or their written representation, that functions as a principal carrier of meaning. Words are composed of one or more morphemes and are either the smallest units susceptible of independent use or consist of two or three such units combined under certain linking conditions, as with the loss of primary accent that distinguishes black·bird· from black· bird·. Words are usually separated by spaces in writing, and are distinguished phonologically, as by accent, in many languages.
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