Use "disavow|disavowed|disavowing|disavows" in a sentence

1. Japan disavowed any designs on the Philippines.

2. The board disavowed the action of the executive.

3. They publicly disavowed any connection with terrorist groups.

4. Could he disavow his father and live?

5. 17 The board disavowed the action of the executive.

6. She tried to disavow her past.

7. I deny, disaffirm and disavow that...

8. I disavow all responsibility for you.

9. They were quick to disavow the rumour.

10. 3 I deny, disaffirm and disavow that...

11. 2 I deny , disaffirm ang disavow that.

12. How important is it to disavow obligation to it?

13. Men, we cannot disavow what happened today.

14. In other words, the address by Petro Poroshenko was disavowed.

15. Top synonyms for Abnegates (other words for Abnegates) are disavows, denies and negates.

16. 10 They were quick to disavow the rumour.

17. Disavow link spam — If you notice some suspicious Backlink activity, you can add spammy links to a disavow file directly from the Backlink Checker

18. Synonyms for Abjures include renounces, abnegates, denies, forswears, rejects, abandons, disavows, relinquishes, repudiates and disclaims

19. But once intertwined with feminist politics (whether embraced or disavowed on campus), Coeducation

20. Antonyms for Avouches include denies, gainsays, abandons, asks, condemns, deserts, disavows, disclaims, discredits and disputes

21. Antonyms for Acceded include denied, rejected, disavowed, discredited, disproved, disacknowledged, rebutted, refuted, repudiated and withsaid

22. Antonyms for Avowing include denying, gainsaying, censuring, concealing, condemning, contradicting, disAvowing, disclaiming, disowning and disputing

23. Synonyms for Abjured include renounced, abnegated, denied, forswore, forsworn, rejected, abandoned, disavowed, relinquished and repudiated

24. Later, after reading Weiss's commentary, Omar apologized for not "disavowing the anti-Semitic trope I unknowingly used".

25. Barbara was subjected to heinous torture, yet reftised to disavow her faith.

26. Barbara was subjected to heinous torture, yet refused to disavow her faith.

27. Perhaps the best approach these days is to disavow competition with Google entirely.

28. Cabaletta disavows any obligation to update the information contained in such press releases after the date of their issuance.

29. But sooner or later, Republicans were bound to notice other reasons to disavow Lincoln.

30. It cannot totally disavow Qaddafi, but it can't sustain him because he's become unpresentable.

31. This "advertising clause" (since disavowed by UC Berkeley) is present in the modified MIT License used by XFree86.

32. As the Tao operates impartially in the universe, so should mankind disavow assertive, purposive action.

33. Antonyms for Acknowledge include reject, deny, contradict, disaffirm, disclaim, renounce, disavow, disconfirm, dismiss and disown

34. But in public the BNP now eschews the crassest racism and claims to disavow violence.

35. The USSR had signed a Treaty of Friendship with the Kuomintang in 1945 and disavowed support for the Chinese Communists.

36. Attorn definition: acknowledge a new land owner as one's landlord synonyms: admit, acknowledge antonyms: deny, disavow, exclude

37. Non-repudiation guarantees that no malicious sender can later disavow having created and sent a specific message.

38. Karan, a disavowed Indian Commando, helps protect a woman from a local thug who is hellbent on forcing her to marry him.

39. Law professor Derek Bell has even argued that black intellectuals disavow militants in order to enhance their prestige with whites.

40. We saw too the marked trend to disavow deviance amongst the women whose personal histories are discussed in Chapter

41. Parties adopt or disavow policies not only to win forthcoming elections but also as a response to past electoral outcomes.

42. Abjure: verb abandon , abrogate , deny , disaffirm , disavow , discard , disclaim , disown , exclude , forgo , give up , recant , refuse to admit , reject , renounce

43. In his address, Nasrallah admitted that the previous government was brought down because of Hariri's refusal to disavow the tribunal.

44. Formally reject or disavow a formerly held belief, usually under pressure Familiarity information: Abjure used as a verb is very rare.

45. Lesser foot-binding Beetiest lessen lessee jack-pudding kell precurricula respondent Snyder less tarnished lesion disavow Prague naïve marathons lesbianism unsubmissive

46. Abjure (third-person singular simple present abjures, present participle abjuring, simple past and past participle Abjured) to renounce upon oath; to forswear; to disavow

47. We respectfully call on the leadership of Living Stream Ministry and the "local churches" to disavow and cease to publish these and similar declarations.

48. Of beggars; hypocrisy, sham, pretense, humbug Not to be confused with: can't – contraction of cannot reCant – withdraw or disavow; revoke, rescind, deny: He reCanted his

49. Culture means many things in this context, but at heart it is a suite of traits we inherit and also choose to disavow or to stress.

50. Abjure - formally reject or disavow a formerly held belief, usually under pressure; "He retracted his earlier statements about his religion"; "She Abjured her beliefs" forswear , recant , retract , resile

51. For in that course, a man doth but disavow fortune; and seemeth to be conscious of his own want in worth; and doth but teach others, to envy him.

52. At the same time, Bush's order pointedly did not disavow the use of"enhanced interrogation techniques" that would likely be found illegal if usedby officials inside the United States.

53. Aligning Androcentric humanist ideology with the adolescent male gaze, Grossman's series renders visible the processes by which the uncritical acceptance of the discrete human body reduces, mutilates, compresses, and disavows the full range of possibilities for …

54. We have appealed to their native justice and magnanimity , and we have conjured them by the ties of our common kindred to disavow these usurpations , which , would inevitably interrupt our connections and correspondence .

55. For the heteronormative Cisgender person investigating trans sexuality, for example, this is often simply a matter of disavowing direct association with the matter under consideration--giving a shrugged mea culpa if you will (cf Smith, 2013)--which at once excoriates and exonerates in that it suggests that there will inevitably be faults due to that personal distance from the subject, but that

56. Abdicate (v.) 1540s, "to disown, disinherit (children)," from Latin abdicatus, past participle of abdicare "to disown, disavow, reject" (specifically abdicare magistratu "renounce office"), literally "proclaim as not belonging to one," from ab "off, away from" (see ab-) + dicare "proclaim" (from PIE root *deik-"to show," also "pronounce solemnly," and see diction).