Concept cluster: Tasks > Cancelation or annulment
v
(transitive) To make real; to realize.
v
To uncover, to bring from obscurity; to resurface (e.g. a memory)
n
(printing) The page that replaces it.
v
To revoke (a former command); to cancel or rescind by giving an order contrary to one previously given.
n
A reprisal in response to a prior reprisal.
n
(rare) A dispelling of false or misleading notions.
n
The act of deallocating.
n
(electronics) The act of deasserting.
v
(transitive) To inform subjects of an experiment about what has happened in a complete and accurate manner.
n
The undoing or annulment of legislation.
n
One who depones.
n
Withdrawal from publication; the act of depublishing.
v
(obsolete, transitive) To partially repeal (a law etc.).
n
(obsolete, law) A state of being released from coverture; freedom of a woman from the coverture of a husband.
n
(military, politics) Withdrawal from combat, confrontation, or the assertion of influence.
v
To nullify a previous invention
v
To cancel the nomination of
v
To put out of place; to disarrange.
v
To submit to an active (mostly dangerous) substance like an allergen, ozone, nicotine, solvent, or to any other stress, in order to test the reaction, resistance, etc.
v
(idiomatic) To recover from an illness or injury.
n
An act of revenge.
v
(archaic) To recede; to retreat.
v
to be treacherous or faithless to; betray.
v
(transitive, figuratively) To reconcile, as a breach or difference; to make whole; to free from guilt.
v
To retaliate
v
To submit to hyperexposure
n
(politics, law) The restoration of credibility to a government by the purging of perpetrators of crimes committed under an earlier regime.
n
One who postpones.
v
Alternative spelling of recognize [(transitive) To match (something or someone which one currently perceives) to a memory of some previous encounter with the same person or thing.]
v
Alternative form of renig [(US, colloquial, dated) To renege.]
n
The act of banishing again.
n
The act of betraying again.
n
Repercussion, or beating back.
v
To drive back or beat back; to repulse.
n
One who makes a rebuttal.
n
(chiefly US politics) The right or procedure by which a public official may be removed from office before the end of their term of office, by a vote of the people to be taken on the filing of a petition signed by a required number or percentage of qualified voters.
n
The act of recanting or something recanted.
n
One who recedes.
n
The act or an instance of receding or withdrawing.
adj
Of or relating to recession or withdrawal, particularly at the end of a religious service or wedding.
n
(by extension) Returning to a negative behavior after having stopped it for a period of time.
n
One who falls back into prior habits, especially criminal habits.
n
Alternative spelling of rescission [An act of rescinding: removing, taking away, or taking back.]
n
The working out of consequences or retribution for one's actions.
v
(obsolete, rare) To draw back; to give way.
n
(archaic) recoil; act of recoiling
v
To conjure back; to bring something back as if by magic
n
(obsolete) recovery
v
(transitive) To refuse or reject (a judge); to declare that the judge shall not try the case or is disqualified from acting.
n
The act of beating or striking back.
n
A second or subsequent denunciation.
v
(transitive) To deny again.
v
(transitive) To discount again.
n
(obsolete) The act of returning; a return.
adj
(Scotland law, now rare) Pertaining to the reduction of a decree etc.; rescissory.
v
(Scotland, England) Alternative form of rest (“to cure, smoke, or dry (meat or fish); (of a horse) to stop or refuse to go, balk”) [(intransitive) To cease from action, motion, work, or performance of any kind; stop; desist; be without motion.]
n
One who suffers from acid reflux.
n
One who refrains.
n
(obsolete) A refrain.
v
(obsolete) To retire or recede.
n
Obsolete spelling of relegate [(historical, obsolete) A person who has been banished from proximity to Rome for a set time, but without losing his civil rights.]
n
(obsolete) One who has relapsed, or fallen back into error; a backslider.
n
The act of being relegated
v
(Scotland, obsolete) To remedy, in its various senses.
v
(obsolete, transitive) To take back, to recant (something one says or believes).
n
A person who reneges.
n
An act or instance of repealing.
n
(obsolete) Recall, as from banishment.
v
(transitive) To drive or beat back.
n
One who, or that which, represses.
v
(transitive) To cancel or postpone the punishment of someone, especially an execution.
n
An act of retaliation.
n
One who repulses or drives back.
n
Retaliation or reprisal; vengeance.
v
(transitive) To repeal, annul, or declare void; to take (something such as a rule or contract) out of effect.
n
(law, parliamentary language) Rescission.
n
An act of rescinding: removing, taking away, or taking back.
adj
Tending to rescind.
n
(law, obsolete) rescue
n
(law, obsolete) The party in whose favor a rescue is made.
v
(Canada, law) To exit, cancel, or draw back from a lease or contract.
n
Obsolete form of rescue. [An act or episode of rescuing, saving.]
n
Violent or otherwise punitive response to an act of harm or perceived injustice; a hitting back; revenge.
n
One who retaliates.
n
(obsolete) Disclosure or detection of something concealed.
v
To thank again.
v
Archaic spelling of reticence. [(transitive, rare) To deliberately not listen or pay attention to; to disregard, to ignore.]
n
(law) An act of retaliation taken by one nation against another as a reprisal.
n
Alternative form of retorsion [(law) An act of retaliation taken by one nation against another as a reprisal.]
n
An act of retracting or withdrawing (a mistake, a statement, etc.); a retraction.
n
retraction (of something previously said)
n
A statement printed or broadcast in a public forum which effects the withdrawal of an earlier assertion, and which concedes that the earlier assertion was in error.
n
One who, or that which, retracts.
n
(law, obsolete) A dismissal with prejudice based on a plaintiff's withdrawal of the suit.
n
One who retreats.
n
The act of moving back from something; a retreat.
n
One who retrenches.
n
One who makes retribution.
n
The act of retroceding; a going back.
v
(intransitive, computing) To relinquish control to the calling procedure.
v
(obsolete) To draw back; to retract.
v
(obsolete) To make a retort; to bandy words.
v
(obsolete) To overcome.
n
An act of revindicating.
v
To recall (troops, objects, etc)
n
An act or instance of revoking.
adj
Revocatory; tending to revoke or recall.
v
(obsolete) To call or bring back.
n
revocation
v
To prevent publication.
n
Retaliation; retribution.
n
The process of unadopting.
n
The retraction of a prior concession
n
Annulment; reversal
v
(transitive) To retract or falsify a previous prediction.
n
The process, act or instance of unselecting.
v
To retract the act of surrendering.
adj
Favouring withdrawal.

Note: Concept clusters like the one above are an experimental OneLook feature. We've grouped words and phrases into thousands of clusters based on a statistical analysis of how they are used in writing. Some of the words and concepts may be vulgar or offensive. The names of the clusters were written automatically and may not precisely describe every word within the cluster; furthermore, the clusters may be missing some entries that you'd normally associate with their names. Click on a word to look it up on OneLook.
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