repudiate

Etymology
From, from , from , 1540s.

Verb

 * 1)  To reject the truth or validity of; to deny.
 * 2)  To refuse to have any relation to; to disown.
 * 3)  To refuse to pay or honor (a debt).
 * 4)  To be repudiated.
 * 1)  To refuse to pay or honor (a debt).
 * 2)  To be repudiated.
 * 1)  To refuse to pay or honor (a debt).
 * 2)  To be repudiated.
 * 1)  To be repudiated.

Quotations
Joyce Carol Oates: "Chaucer . . . not only came to doubt the worth of his extraordinary body of work, but repudiated it"

Eldridge Cleaver: "If a man like Malcolm X could change and repudiate racism, if I myself and other former Muslims can change, if young whites can change, then there is hope for America."

"The seventeenth century sometimes seems for more than a moment to gather up and to digest into its art all the experience of the human mind which (from the same point of view) the later centuries seem to have been partly engaged in repudiating." T. S. Eliot, Andrew Marvell.

"The fierce willingness to repudiate domination in a holistic manner is the starting point for progressive cultural revolution." --bell hooks

Translations

 * Arabic: رَفَضَ
 * Armenian:
 * Bulgarian:
 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin:
 * Dutch:
 * Esperanto: malagnoski
 * Finnish: ,
 * French: ,
 * German: (sb./sth.),, ,
 * Greek:
 * Hungarian: ,
 * Latin:
 * Macedonian: о́дбие, о́тфрли
 * Maori: whawhati, whākorekore
 * Norwegian: fornekte
 * Polish:
 * Russian:
 * Spanish:, , ,
 * Turkish: ,


 * Arabic: تَبَرَّأَ
 * Bulgarian: отричам се
 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin:
 * Finnish: kieltäytyä olemasta missään tekemisissä,
 * German:, , sich distanzieren, , sich verweigern
 * Greek:
 * Hungarian:, of a relative
 * Latin: repudiō
 * Macedonian: се о́ткаже, о́дбие
 * Polish:, wyprzeć się
 * Russian:
 * Spanish: ,
 * Turkish:


 * Finnish: kieltäytyä maksamasta


 * French:
 * Ido:
 * Italian: