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All disavowal synonyms

disΒ·aΒ·vowΒ·al
D d

noun disavowal

  • abandonment β€” The abandonment of a place, thing, or person is the act of leaving it permanently or for a long time, especially when you should not do so.
  • abandonment β€” The abandonment of a place, thing, or person is the act of leaving it permanently or for a long time, especially when you should not do so.
  • recantation β€” to withdraw or disavow (a statement, opinion, etc.), especially formally; retract.
  • relinquishment β€” to renounce or surrender (a possession, right, etc.): to relinquish the throne.
  • denial β€” A denial of something is a statement that it is not true, does not exist, or did not happen.
  • dismissal β€” an act or instance of dismissing.
  • clause β€” A clause is a section of a legal document.
  • waiver β€” an intentional relinquishment of some right, interest, or the like.
  • antithesis β€” The antithesis of something is its exact opposite.
  • reversal β€” an act or instance of reversing.
  • defiance β€” Defiance is behaviour or an attitude which shows that you are not willing to obey someone.
  • ban β€” To ban something means to state officially that it must not be done, shown, or used.
  • noncompliance β€” failure or refusal to comply, as with a law, regulation, or term of a contract.
  • disengagement β€” the act or process of disengaging or the state of being disengaged.
  • annulment β€” The annulment of a contract or marriage is an official declaration that it is invalid, so that legally it is considered never to have existed.
  • rejection β€” the act or process of rejecting.
  • veto β€” 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.
  • disapproval β€” the act or state of disapproving; a condemnatory feeling, look, or utterance; censure: stern disapproval.
  • repudiation β€” the act of repudiating.
  • rebuttal β€” an act of rebutting, as in a debate.
  • retraction β€” the act of retracting or the state of being retracted.
  • betrayal β€” A betrayal is an action which betrays someone or something, or the fact of being betrayed.
  • derelict β€” A place or building that is derelict is empty and in a bad state of repair because it has not been used or lived in for a long time.
  • avoidance β€” Avoidance of someone or something is the act of avoiding them.
  • resignation β€” the act of resigning.
  • flight β€” an act or instance of fleeing or running away; hasty departure.
  • perfidy β€” deliberate breach of faith or trust; faithlessness; treachery: perfidy that goes unpunished.
  • treachery β€” violation of faith; betrayal of trust; treason.
  • retreat β€” the forced or strategic withdrawal of an army or an armed force before an enemy, or the withdrawing of a naval force from action.
  • departure β€” Departure or a departure is the act of going away from somewhere.
  • withdrawal β€” Also, withdrawment. the act or condition of withdrawing.
  • secession β€” an act or instance of seceding.
  • leaving β€” something that is left; residue.
  • denial β€” A denial of something is a statement that it is not true, does not exist, or did not happen.
  • dissociation β€” an act or instance of dissociating.
  • abjuration β€” the act of abjuring.
  • abnegation β€” a giving up of rights, etc.; self-denial; renunciation
  • proscription β€” the act of proscribing.
  • nullity β€” the state or quality of being null; nothingness; invalidity.
  • blank β€” Something that is blank has nothing on it.
  • nonexistence β€” absence of existence.
  • inverse β€” reversed in position, order, direction, or tendency.
  • no β€” classic drama of Japan, developed chiefly in the 14th century, employing verse, prose, choral song, and dance in highly conventionalized formal and thematic patterns derived from religious sources and folk myths.
  • vacuity β€” the state of being vacuous or without contents; vacancy; emptiness: the vacuity of the open sea.
  • nullification β€” an act or instance of nullifying.
  • converse β€” If you converse with someone, you talk to them. You can also say that two people converse.
  • opposite β€” situated, placed, or lying face to face with something else or each other, or in corresponding positions with relation to an intervening line, space, or thing: opposite ends of a room.
  • void β€” Law. having no legal force or effect; not legally binding or enforceable.
  • refusal β€” an act or instance of refusing.
  • opposition β€” the action of opposing, resisting, or combating.
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