v
(informal, transitive) To remove an item from the menu.
v
(obsolete, transitive) To unyoke; set free; uncouple.
v
(intransitive) To stop or fail at something in the preliminary stages.
v
(transitive) To remove; to take away; withdraw.
v
(transitive, obsolete) To take away.
n
removal; ousting, especially, of a corporate officer from office
v
(intransitive, archaic) To turn away.
v
(of a conversation) To divert from the main topic of conversation.
v
(obsolete) To render void or useless; to vacate or annul.
v
(idiomatic) To disallow or cancel
v
To talk about something else, especially to avoid issues that are too delicate or difficult.
v
(transitive, of a person) To exclude; to dismiss from participation or eligibility.
v
(medicine, pharmacology) Abbreviation of discontinue. [(transitive) To interrupt the continuance of; to put an end to, especially as regards commercial productions; to stop producing, making, or supplying.]
v
(intransitive) To break up camp and move on.
v
To take one thing from another; remove from; make smaller or less by some amount.
v
To deduct or take away (a part of income, money, rents, etc.).
n
(Britain) The high-profile removal of a person from an organization.
v
(transitive) To remove an official status from something, by publishing the fact in an official gazette
v
To halt or inhibit induction
v
To withdraw one's investment.
v
Obsolete form of deliver. [To set free from restraint or danger.]
v
To remove from an official register or list.
v
obsolete typography of deliver [To set free from restraint or danger.]
n
A document certifying that a person has (honourably) demitted, as from a Masonic lodge.
n
Obsolete form of demurrage. [(shipping) the detention of a ship or other freight vehicle, during delayed loading or unloading]
v
(transitive, figuratively) To lay bare; to expose.
v
(transitive) To remove (a leader) from (high) office, without killing the incumbent.
n
The removal of someone from office.
v
To remove saccades (from)
v
(transitive, Britain, politics) To reject (an incumbent) as a party's candidate for a forthcoming election.
v
(intransitive) To come off something.
v
(intransitive) To take away; to withdraw or remove.
v
(obsolete) To turn away; to divert.
v
(obsolete, transitive) To roll (something) down; to unroll.
n
(medicine) The process of quitting a course of treatment with a drug.
v
(obsolete, transitive) To drive away, disperse, shake off; said especially of tumors.
v
(transitive) To free or release from a state of imprisonment.
v
(intransitive) To move or go from a dwelling or former position.
v
(transitive, computing, Unix) To detach (a job or process) so that it can continue to run even when the user who launched it ends his/her login session.
v
(transitive) To rid; to free.
v
(transitive) To release from prison; to set at liberty.
v
(archaic, transitive) To unseat.
v
(intransitive, literally, of lines or paths) To run apart; to separate; to tend into different directions.
v
(intransitive) To obtain a legal divorce.
v
(colloquial) To cancel an order for food.
v
(grammar) To remove from a phrase a word which is grammatically needed, but which is clearly understood without having to be stated.
v
(transitive, rare) To send or give out; manifest.
v
(transitive, medicine) To eliminate from diagnostic consideration.
v
(computing) To covertly extract data.
v
(transitive, formal, archaic) To fish out; to find out by skill or laborious investigation; to search out.
v
(transitive) To make (space or time) available.
v
(transitive) To divide; to separate; to break the monotony of.
v
To use something that belongs to another person (often with permission)
v
(computing, transitive) To take (a system, etc.) offline; to demote from an active or online state.
v
(transitive) To leave out or exclude.
v
(rare) Synonym of overhaul
v
(transitive) To search (a ship) for contraband goods.
v
(transitive, military) To strike off the payroll.
v
(reflexive, obsolete, rare) Remove (oneself) to a distance from something or somewhere.
n
The dismissal of someone from office.
n
Obsolete form of removal. [The process of removing, or the fact of being removed.]
v
(transitive) To drive back (an assailant, advancing force etc.).
v
(transitive) To cut down or reduce.
v
(computing, Unix) Abbreviation of remove. [(transitive) To delete.]
v
Abbreviation of remove. [(transitive) To delete.]
v
(transitive) To make unavailable.
v
(transitive, figuratively) To exclude selectively.
v
(transitive) To call off a scheduled event; to cancel.
v
(intransitive) To evict oneself, especially from a country.
v
(obsolete, intransitive) To go apart.
n
Alternative spelling of shakeup [A vigorous reorganization, especially of the personnel or procedures of an organization.]
v
(transitive, obsolete, Britain, dialectal) To turn aside or away; to divert.
v
To identify or select one member of a group from the others; generally used with out, either to single out or to single (something) out.
v
To withdraw; to take away.
v
(transitive, arithmetic) To remove or reduce; especially to reduce a quantity or number
n
The removal of something.
v
(psychiatry) To exclude undesirable thoughts from one's mind.
v
(travel, aviation) To remove the value of an unused coupon from an air ticket, typically so as to allow continuation of the next sectors' travel.
n
The act of removing a component in order to install a different one.
v
To subtract a quality from; make something seem not so good or interesting.
n
Enforced removal of material from a website, etc.
v
To remove (an actor) from a role that was previously assigned to them.
v
(transitive) To cause someone to become unemployed.
v
(transitive, intransitive, social media) To cease to subscribe to (a feed of another user's activity).
v
(transitive, euphemistic) To fire; to terminate the employment of (somebody previously hired).
v
(figuratively, transitive, intransitive) To reveal, uncover or unfold.
v
(transitive) To expose, or reveal the true character of someone.
v
To temporarily disconnect from worldly experiences.
v
To throw from one's seat; to deprive of a seat.
v
(transitive) To cause (something previously learned) to be forgotten, or recognized as an error, etc.
v
(intransitive) To withdraw from volunteering; to revoke one's own voluntary status.
n
The act of dismissing someone from a position marked by the wearing of a wig, such as a barrister or judge.
v
(transitive, databases) To optimise a database or database table by physically removing deleted tuples.
v
(transitive, obsolete) To remove the contents of; to make or leave vacant or empty; to quit; to leave.
v
Of a man: to remove the penis from a partner's body orifice before ejaculation; to engage in coitus interruptus.
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