n
The person or authority that annuls.
n
An act or instance of annulling.
v
(obsolete) To oppose or revoke the command of (someone).
v
(transitive) To withdraw accreditation from.
v
(transitive, computing) To revoke the authentication of; to cause no longer to be authenticated.
v
(transitive) To revoke permission, sanction or consent.
v
(US, law, transitive) To prohibit (a person or company that has been convicted of criminal acts in connection with a government program) from future participation in that program.
v
(transitive, law) To remove (something's) status as a capital crime; to cause (something) to no longer be a capital crime.
v
(transitive) To annul the certification of.
n
One who defers or puts off.
v
(transitive) To cause (something) not to be legitimate; to make illegitimate, to illegitimize.
v
(transitive) To deprive of a license.
v
(transitive) To strip of privilege.
v
To remove validation (from)
v
(transitive, law) To decline to apply a rule or law that previously applied
v
Alternative form of disauthorize [(transitive) To deprive of credit or authority; to discredit.]
v
(transitive) To deprive of credit or authority; to discredit.
v
(transitive) To disavow.
n
One who disbands something.
v
(transitive) To deprive of capacity; to incapacitate.
n
(countable) The act of disempowering
v
(obsolete, transitive) To disable; to disqualify.
v
(transitive) To deprive of what ennobles; to degrade.
v
(transitive) To deprive of title, right or claim.
v
(transitive) To disqualify.
n
(uncountable) The state of having been or process of becoming freed of false belief.
n
The act of disinheriting
n
(rare) One who is disinherited.
v
(obsolete) To make unfamiliar with something; to disaccustom.
n
The act of depriving of investiture.
v
(transitive) To remove (fears, doubts, objections etc.) by proving them unjustified.
v
To deprive of a privilege or privileges.
v
(transitive) To make ineligible for something.
adj
(law) Serving to divest.
n
(obsolete) Deprivation of authority or dignity; degradation.
v
To render invalid; discredit.
v
(transitive) To make ineffective; to neutralize, to negate.
v
(transitive, law) To make legally invalid.
v
(transitive) To disown the authority of; to repudiate.
v
(transitive) To revoke the certification of.
v
Obsolete form of undeceive. [(transitive) to free from misconception, deception or error]
v
(transitive) to free from misconception, deception or error
n
The point of being undeceived or freed from a misconception.
v
(transitive) To decipher.
v
(transitive) To undeceive someone who has been duped.
v
To reverse or negate the feeling of
v
To disabuse of a deception.
v
(transitive) To cease to name; to deprive (someone or something) of their name.
v
(transitive) To disqualify.
v
(transitive) To make something ineffective, to invalidate.
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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