revoke|revokes in English
noun
[re·voke || rɪ'vəʊk]
failure to play a card of the proper suit when it is possible to do so (Cards); cancellation, annulment, retraction, act of revoking
Use "revoke|revokes" in a sentence
1. State revoke your license, yet?
2. You can revoke an invitation by selecting the tick box next to the channel and clicking Revoke invitation.
3. 14 Revoke resolutions reached at legal meetings.
4. 1 The university may revoke my diploma.
5. Abrogate Withdraw, rescind, revoke, or cancel
6. For example, get an alert whenever someone authorizes or revokes access by a specified application.
7. 11 The intention to revoke a will.
8. 2 Remarriage would revoke all previous wills.
9. 13 Could not revoke login access from'% s '.
10. 14 We hereby revoke the agreement of May 200
11. 10 We hereby revoke the agreement of May 200
12. Phineas lashes out at Candace and revokes her S.H.E.D. card while Buford goes out to look for Hulkjeet.
13. And I need you to revoke his employee access card.
14. Synonyms for Abrogates include revokes, repudiates, countermands, overrides, abolishes, annuls, cancels, ends, invalidates and negates
15. The Adversaries of the declarer take ten tricks, but revoke
16. 12 Revoke the advanced security privileges from the current user.
17. Your Honor, I'm asking you to revoke that bail order.
18. To revoke or annul ( a decision or decree, for example ).
19. 16 synonyms for Countermand: cancel, reverse, override, repeal, revoke, retract, rescind
20. A testator may revoke or alter a will he previously made.
21. Another word for Countermand: cancel, reverse, override, repeal, revoke Collins English Thesaurus
22. 17 A testator may revoke or alter a will he previously made.
23. Article 20 A testator may revoke or alter will he previously made.
24. A testator can revoke his will at any time during his life.
25. The senate would revoke their trade franchise, and they'd be finished.