v
(finance) To become detached from or to abandon a fixed exchange rate between two currencies.
v
(transitive) To not select; to rule out of selection.
v
(transitive) To neutralize, undo a property or condition.
v
(obsolete) To recall from a swoon; to revive; sometimes with to.
v
(transitive, programming) To relinquish (previously allocated memory) to the system.
n
(databases) An operation in which data is erased from the database (as opposed to a soft deletion).
v
(transitive, Scotland, law) To annul by legal means.
n
(snooker) An instance of reracking the balls to restart a frame.
v
(idiomatic) To enter into a rehabilitation program.
v
(rare) To undo (revoke) the absolution of.
v
(rare) To undo (one's or someone's) acquaintance (with someone or something).
n
(computing, countable, uncountable) The withdrawal of an earlier notification.
v
(obsolete, transitive) To unsay; to annul or cancel.
v
(transitive) Hypothetically, to undo the betrayal of.
v
(transitive) To take back, undo the act of canceling (something).
v
(travel, aviation) To remove a previously checked-in passenger from the check-in system, allowing changes to the ticket.
v
(transitive) To not choose; choose against; deselect; reject.
v
(transitive) To undo the confirmation of.
v
(transitive) To reverse or recant (a previous decision).
v
(transitive, programming) To revoke the declaration of (a variable, namespace, etc.) so that it is no longer available.
v
To reverse or fail to implement a design; to design something in a way that deliberately rejects the conventions of designing.
v
(transitive) To forget or revoke the discovery of (something discovered earlier).
v
Alternative form of unenroll [(transitive, intransitive) To undo the enrolment of; to cause (oneself or another person) to not be enrolled.]
n
The process of unenrolling.
v
To undo the act of experiencing something; to erase the memory of having experienced something.
v
(Internet, transitive) To remove from one’s list of favorites.
v
(transitive) To remove, rescind, or cancel funding for.
v
(transitive) To undo or remove grace; render grace ineffective; make ungraceful or ungracious.
v
(transitive) To redeem (goods previously pawned).
v
(transitive) To take back or withdraw (something invested).
v
(transitive) To cancel or withdraw an invitation.
v
(transitive) To remove from involvement.
v
(transitive) To cease to be a member of; to leave.
v
(transitive) To undo or remove the judgement from.
v
(transitive, intransitive) To undo or annul legislation.
v
(transitive) To cause no longer to be licensed; to annul the licensing of.
v
(transitive, rare) To recover (something lost); to find again.
v
(transitive, computing) To cease to manage; to relinquish ownership or control of.
v
(transitive) To countermand an order for.
v
To undo, take back, or annul, as a payment.
v
To annul or revoke (something previously prayed for) by prayer.
v
(transitive) To undo or overthrow (something) by preaching; to recant (something preached before).
v
(rare, transitive) To recommend against (something previously prescribed); to withdraw a prescription.
v
(transitive) To revoke or annul (something promised before).
v
To undo or counter a provocation.
v
(transitive) To deprive of a purpose; to remove or derail the purpose of.
v
(transitive, accounting) To undo the reconciliation of.
n
The process of unregistering.
v
(transitive) To exempt from regulation; to deregulate.
v
(transitive, rare) To undo the rejection of; to accept back.
v
To reverse a repeal; to restore a ruling or law that was repealed.
v
(transitive) To cancel the requirement for; to make something that is required into something that is not required.
v
(transitive, chiefly computing) To undo or cancel a reservation.
v
(transitive) To remove from a schedule.
v
(of a state, or those acting on behalf of a state) To declare void one's signing of (a treaty).
v
(transitive, rare) To recover (money that has been spent); to undo the spending of.
v
(transitive, UK politics) To demote a question from an oral one to a written one (because oral questions are conventionally marked with a star on the Order of Business in the House of Commons).
v
(transitive) To undo the establishment of; disestablish; dissolve; divest.
v
(transitive) To reverse the process of stealing; to return, or never to have taken, something stolen.
v
Abbreviation of unsubscribe. [(intransitive) To cancel a subscription, especially to an online service.]
v
(transitive) To retract (a submission); to withdraw from consideration.
v
(intransitive) To cancel a subscription, especially to an online service.
v
(transitive, Australia, finance) To restore (a share capital account) from a tainted state by paying the necessary tax, etc.
v
(transitive) To undo or retract one's thankfulness; negate, cancel, or revoke one's thanks.
v
(transitive, archaic) To reverse or annul by vote.
v
(transitive) To annul or reverse by an act of the will.
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of the words and concepts may be vulgar or offensive. The names of the
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