disown|disowned|disowning|disowns in English
verb
[dis·own || dɪs'əʊn]
cut off (from an inheritance, family, etc.); repudiate, disavow, renounce
Use "disown|disowned|disowning|disowns" in a sentence
1. Jesus had told his disciples that “whoever disowns me before men, I will also disown him before my Father.”
2. Tom disowned the letter.
3. I can no more disown him than I can disown the black community.
4. He disowned his spendthrift son.
5. Georgia church disowns suspect, says he Betrayed faith
6. Her family disowned her for marrying a gentile.
7. (Matthew 16:24, 25) Disowning ourselves means making a dedication.
8. The boy was so wicked that his father disowned him.
9. 1 The spokesperson disowned a published statement.
10. She disowned any hand in the matter.
11. She would never have disowned any one on the ground of poverty.
12. Antonyms for Avouchment include disavowal, rejection, denial, disclaimer, contradiction, repudiation, renunciation, disowning, negation and recantation
13. The man was so cruel that his friends disowned him.
14. Peter's father disowned him when he was caught taking drugs.
15. Those comments were later disowned by an official army spokesman.
16. Managers may disown their part in the appraisal system.
17. So the patient work of the German schoolmasters was disowned.
18. God is just because He can not disown Himself.
19. • Why should one disown oneself, and how is this done?
20. (Luke 9:23) ‘Disowning oneself’ is not simply a verbal claim of change of ownership.
21. Antonyms for Avowing include denying, gainsaying, censuring, concealing, condemning, contradicting, disAvowing, disclaiming, disowning and disputing
22. Antonyms for Asseveration include disavowal, denial, rejection, disclaimer, contradiction, repudiation, renunciation, rebuttal, recantation and disowning
23. The parents disown their children. They are terribly, terribly hurt.
24. Therefore I disown what I have said and repent in dust and ashes.
25. After their elopement, Patricia's family disowned her for marrying a black man.