Imperative |
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reject |
reject |
Noun | 1. | ![]() deciding, decision making - the cognitive process of reaching a decision; "a good executive must be good at decision making" |
Verb | 1. | reject - refuse to accept or acknowledge; "I reject the idea of starting a war"; "The journal rejected the student's paper" pass judgment, evaluate, judge - form a critical opinion of; "I cannot judge some works of modern art"; "How do you evaluate this grant proposal?" "We shouldn't pass judgment on other people" disbelieve, discredit - reject as false; refuse to accept repudiate - refuse to acknowledge, ratify, or recognize as valid; "The woman repudiated the divorce settlement" recuse - challenge or except to a judge as being incompetent or interested, in canon and civil law reprobate - reject (documents) as invalid repudiate, disown, renounce - cast off; "She renounced her husband"; "The parents repudiated their son" brush aside, brush off, discount, dismiss, disregard, ignore, push aside - bar from attention or consideration; "She dismissed his advances" accept - consider or hold as true; "I cannot accept the dogma of this church"; "accept an argument" |
2. | ![]() freeze off, spurn, pooh-pooh, disdain, scorn, turn down, reject - reject with contempt; "She spurned his advances" bounce - refuse to accept and send back; "bounce a check" | |
3. | reject - deem wrong or inappropriate; "I disapprove of her child rearing methods" pass judgment, evaluate, judge - form a critical opinion of; "I cannot judge some works of modern art"; "How do you evaluate this grant proposal?" "We shouldn't pass judgment on other people" object - express or raise an objection or protest or criticism or express dissent; "She never objected to the amount of work her boss charged her with"; "When asked to drive the truck, she objected that she did not have a driver's license" deprecate - express strong disapproval of; deplore deter, discourage - try to prevent; show opposition to; "We should discourage this practice among our youth" | |
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5. | reject - resist immunologically the introduction of some foreign tissue or organ; "His body rejected the liver of the donor" | |
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7. | reject - dismiss from consideration or a contest; "John was ruled out as a possible suspect because he had a strong alibi"; "This possibility can be eliminated from our consideration" |