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All validate antonyms

val·i·date
V v

verb validate

  • knock over — to strike a sounding blow with the fist, knuckles, or anything hard, especially on a door, window, or the like, as in seeking admittance, calling attention, or giving a signal: to knock on the door before entering.
  • counterplot — a plot designed to frustrate another plot
  • overbalance — to outweigh: The opportunity overbalances the disadvantages of leaving town.
  • call on — If you call on someone to do something or call upon them to do it, you say publicly that you want them to do it.
  • counterpoised — a counterbalancing weight.
  • blow sky-high — to destroy completely
  • beat down — When the sun beats down, it is very hot and bright.
  • koing — a knockout in boxing.
  • make amends — reparation or compensation for a loss, damage, or injury of any kind; recompense.
  • break down — If a machine or a vehicle breaks down, it stops working.
  • overbalanced — Simple past tense and past participle of overbalance.
  • fly in the face of — to move through the air using wings.
  • cancel out — If one thing cancels out another thing, the two things have opposite effects, so that when they are combined no real effect is produced.
  • disconfirming — Not confirming.
  • quash — to put down or suppress completely; quell; subdue: to quash a rebellion.
  • disannul — to annul utterly; make void: to disannul a contract.
  • annul — If an election or a contract is annulled, it is declared invalid, so that legally it is considered never to have existed.
  • 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.
  • overbalancing — Present participle of overbalance.
  • backwater — A backwater is a place that is isolated.
  • kos — a unit of land distance of various lengths from 1 to 3 miles (1.6 to 4.8 km).
  • watergate — a White House political scandal that came to light during the 1972 presidential campaign, growing out of a break-in at the Democratic Party headquarters at the Watergate apartment-office complex in Washington, D.C., and, after congressional hearings, culminating in the resignation of President Nixon in 1974.
  • countervail — to act or act against with equal power or force
  • downed — from higher to lower; in descending direction or order; toward, into, or in a lower position: to come down the ladder.
  • get the hook — a curved or angular piece of metal or other hard substance for catching, pulling, holding, or suspending something.
  • invalidate — to render invalid; discredit.
  • defeat — If you defeat someone, you win a victory over them in a battle, game, or contest.
  • counterwork — work done in opposition to other work
  • bleep — A bleep is a short, high-pitched sound, usually one of a series, that is made by an electrical device.
  • flipflop — Alternative form of flip-flop.
  • nullify — to render or declare legally void or inoperative: to nullify a contract.
  • dissolve — to make a solution of, as by mixing with a liquid; pass into solution: to dissolve salt in water.
  • nig — nidge.
  • bleeping — (used as a substitute word for one regarded as objectionable): Get that bleeping cat out of here!
  • forget it — certainly not
  • blot out — If one thing blots out another thing, it is in front of the other thing and prevents it from being seen.
  • abolish — If someone in authority abolishes a system or practice, they formally put an end to it.
  • make for — to bring into existence by shaping or changing material, combining parts, etc.: to make a dress; to make a channel; to make a work of art.
  • make waves — a disturbance on the surface of a liquid body, as the sea or a lake, in the form of a moving ridge or swell.
  • 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.
  • go away — leave!
  • disprove — to prove (an assertion, claim, etc.) to be false or wrong; refute; invalidate: I disproved his claim.
  • circumduct — (obsolete) To lead about or astray.
  • clean up — If you clean up a mess or clean up a place where there is a mess, you make things tidy and free of dirt again.
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