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sus·pend (s -sp nd )v. sus·pend·ed, sus·pend·ing, sus·pends v.tr.1. To bar for a period from a privilege, office, or position, usually as a punishment: suspend a student from school. 2. To cause to stop for a period; interrupt: suspended the trial. 3. a. To hold in abeyance; defer: suspend judgment. See Synonyms at defer1. b. To render temporarily ineffective: suspend a jail sentence; suspend all parking regulations. 4. To hang so as to allow free movement: suspended the mobile from the ceiling. 5. To support or keep from falling without apparent attachment, as by buoyancy: suspend oneself in the water. v.intr.1. To cease for a period; delay. 2. To fail to make payments or meet obligations.
[Middle English suspenden, from Old French suspendre, from Latin suspendere : sub-, from below; see sub- + pendere, to hang; see (s)pen- in Indo-European roots.] |
ThesaurusLegend: Synonyms Related Words Antonyms | Adj. | 1. | suspended - (of undissolved particles in a fluid) supported or kept from sinking or falling by buoyancy and without apparent attachment; "suspended matter such as silt or mud..."; "dust particles suspended in the air"; "droplets in suspension in a gas"supported - held up or having the weight borne especially from below; "supported joints in a railroad track have ties directly under the rail ends" |
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