All certification antonyms
cer·ti·fi·ca·tion
C c noun certification
- prohibition — the act of prohibiting.
- denial — A denial of something is a statement that it is not true, does not exist, or did not happen.
- refusal — an act or instance of refusing.
- conclusion — When you come to a conclusion, you decide that something is true after you have thought about it carefully and have considered all the relevant facts.
- disallowance — to refuse to allow; reject; veto: to disallow a claim for compensation.
- repudiation — the act of repudiating.
- negation — the act of denying: He shook his head in negation of the charge.
- nullification — an act or instance of nullifying.
- 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.
- rejection — the act or process of rejecting.
- breach — If you breach an agreement, a law, or a promise, you break it.
- break — When an object breaks or when you break it, it suddenly separates into two or more pieces, often because it has been hit or dropped.
- secret — done, made, or conducted without the knowledge of others: secret negotiations.
- loss — detriment, disadvantage, or deprivation from failure to keep, have, or get: to bear the loss of a robbery.
- miss — to fail to hit or strike: to miss a target.
- uncertainty — the state of being uncertain; doubt; hesitancy: His uncertainty gave impetus to his inquiry.
- disagreement — the act, state, or fact of disagreeing.
- disapproval — the act or state of disapproving; a condemnatory feeling, look, or utterance; censure: stern disapproval.
- hypothesis — a proposition, or set of propositions, set forth as an explanation for the occurrence of some specified group of phenomena, either asserted merely as a provisional conjecture to guide investigation (working hypothesis) or accepted as highly probable in the light of established facts.
- theory — a coherent group of tested general propositions, commonly regarded as correct, that can be used as principles of explanation and prediction for a class of phenomena: Einstein's theory of relativity. Synonyms: principle, law, doctrine.
- answer — When you answer someone who has asked you something, you say something back to them.
- finish — to bring (something) to an end or to completion; complete: to finish a novel; to finish breakfast.