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All circumstantiate antonyms

cir·cum·stan·ti·ate
C c

verb circumstantiate

  • 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.
  • invalidate — to render invalid; discredit.
  • reject — to refuse to have, take, recognize, etc.: to reject the offer of a better job.
  • disprove — to prove (an assertion, claim, etc.) to be false or wrong; refute; invalidate: I disproved his claim.
  • disallow — to refuse to allow; reject; veto: to disallow a claim for compensation.
  • disapprove — to think (something) wrong or reprehensible; censure or condemn in opinion.
  • refuse — to decline to accept (something offered): to refuse an award.
  • 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.
  • refute — to prove to be false or erroneous, as an opinion or charge.
  • annul — If an election or a contract is annulled, it is declared invalid, so that legally it is considered never to have existed.
  • destroy — To destroy something means to cause so much damage to it that it is completely ruined or does not exist any more.
  • repudiate — to reject as having no authority or binding force: to repudiate a claim.
  • discredit — to injure the credit or reputation of; defame: an effort to discredit honest politicians.
  • confuse — If you confuse two things, you get them mixed up, so that you think one of them is the other one.
  • oppose — to act against or provide resistance to; combat.
  • disagree — to fail to agree; differ: The conclusions disagree with the facts. The theories disagree in their basic premises.
  • cancel — If you cancel something that has been arranged, you stop it from happening. If you cancel an order for goods or services, you tell the person or organization supplying them that you no longer wish to receive them.
  • void — Law. having no legal force or effect; not legally binding or enforceable.
  • conceal — If you conceal something, you cover it or hide it carefully.
  • hide — Informal. to administer a beating to; thrash.
  • suppress — to put an end to the activities of (a person, body of persons, etc.): to suppress the Communist and certain left-leaning parties.
  • mix up — an act or instance of mixing.
  • simplify — to make less complex or complicated; make plainer or easier: to simplify a problem.
  • misrepresent — to represent incorrectly, improperly, or falsely.
  • withhold — to hold back; restrain or check.
  • cover — If you cover something, you place something else over it in order to protect it, hide it, or close it.
  • renounce — to give up or put aside voluntarily: to renounce worldly pleasures.
  • prevent — to keep from occurring; avert; hinder: He intervened to prevent bloodshed.
  • ruinruins, the remains of a building, city, etc., that has been destroyed or that is in disrepair or a state of decay: We visited the ruins of ancient Greece.
  • unsettle — to alter from a settled state; cause to be no longer firmly fixed or established; render unstable; disturb: Violence unsettled the government.
  • stop — to cease from, leave off, or discontinue: to stop running.
  • fail — to fall short of success or achievement in something expected, attempted, desired, or approved: The experiment failed because of poor planning.
  • miss — to fail to hit or strike: to miss a target.
  • disestablish — to deprive of the character of being established; cancel; abolish.
  • guess — to arrive at or commit oneself to an opinion about (something) without having sufficient evidence to support the opinion fully: to guess a person's weight.
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