cancel out in English

verb

eliminate the effect of something

Use "cancel out" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "cancel out" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "cancel out", or refer to the context using the word "cancel out" in the English Dictionary.

1. These arguments cancel out.

2. His shortcomings cancel out his virtues.

3. Her income and spendings cancel out.

4. The pros and cons cancel out.

5. His weaknesses cancel out his virtues.

6. Will you cancel out that charge, please ?

7. Next, you should cancel out all the noughts.

8. A shared account, however, shouldn't cancel out individual accounts.

9. 20 His strong points and weak points cancel out.

10. I'm sorry, I have to cancel out luncheon appointment.

11. Left: Input space and cancel out the guessing word.

12. 3 The gains and losses are expected to cancel out.

13. We can subtract -- We can -- These top two terms cancel out.

14. Her kindness and generosity cancel out her occasional flashes of temper.

15. You must cancel out all the charges before you leave the hotel.

16. If you just add these two together, they are going to cancel out.

17. Sometimes the rainfall in winter is barely enough to cancel out the soil moisture deficit.

18. Maybe we could add these two equations together to get some variables to cancel out.

19. This month's pay cheque will cancel out his debt, but it won't give him any extra money.

20. But they suggest that overall, punishment has other effects which cancel out and even outweigh its deterrent effects.

21. With so many weapons to hand, some cancel out others in a tangled web of incentives and disincentives.

22. Basically, this involves using another source of sound to produce vibrations that cancel out the effects of noise.

23. Annul: verb abnegate , abolere , abolish , abrogare , annihilate , avoid , call back , cancel , cancel out , contravene , countermand , counterorder , deny , destroy

24. Messages from thousands of photoreceptors are funneled into each ganglion cell, except some cancel out the actions of others.

25. 2 Messages from thousands of photoreceptors are funneled into each ganglion cell, except some cancel out the actions of others.

26. The pattern is one of random steps, which by the laws of statistics tend to cancel out over longer periods.

27. Whether they all cancel out to give a theory that is finite without any infinite subtractions is not yet known.

28. Numerical examples demonstrate that, the CMM, when placed adjacent to a strongly Aberrating layer, could acoustically cancel out that Aberrating layer

29. Numerical examples demonstrate that, the CMM, when placed adjacent to a strongly Aberrating layer, could acoustically cancel out that Aberrating layer

30. An improvement in the quality rating should be observed when the ratings are aggregated as errors tend generally to cancel out.

31. But Sepp said continuing the mortgage and charitable deductions at the same time would cancel out the increase from investment taxes.

32. Countervail: verb abrogate , act against with equal force , agitate against , alter , avail against , balance , be connrary, cancel , cancel out , check , conflict

33. Chelsea's Joe Cole set up Crouch to cancel out Omar Pouso's first-half volley and then scored one himself in injury time to clinch victory.

34. The left- hand side, these guys cancel out, that was the whole point, so you're just left with the absolute value of y as being less than or equal to.

35. To bring to an end the effect or existence of; cancel out: "That task would be easier to perform now that his personal stake in it was Annulled" (Edith Wharton)

36. If a cryptanalyst thinks that a user has used the same key to encrypt two different files, he can XOR the two files together and cancel out the output from the PRNG.

37. Countermand⇒ vtr transitive verb: Verb taking a direct object--for example, "Say something." "She found the cat." (overrule, cancel out) revocar⇒ vtr verbo transitivo: Verbo que requiere de un objeto directo ("di la verdad", "encontré una moneda")