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disavow

/dis-uh-vou/US // ˌdɪs əˈvaʊ //UK // (ˌdɪsəˈvaʊ) //

不承认,拒绝承认,驳斥,拒绝接受

Related Words

Definitions

v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to disclaim knowledge of, connection with, or responsibility for; disown; repudiate: He disavowed the remark that had been attributed to him.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Then she won, and Republicans tried to put a good face on it — even falsely claiming she had disavowed QAnon and suggesting the country should move on.

  • We call on leaders from across the political spectrum, including the President of the United States, to disavow false and dangerous narratives, and encourage their supporters to do so as well.

  • Hailed on its launch in 2012 — not long after the Penguin algorithm update — as the search engine’s “best spam reporting tool yet”, disavow links allowed webmasters to instruct Google to ignore all links from certain domains.

  • He disavowed the hateful messages attributed to him and said he plans to consult with attorneys about his firing and the social media account.

  • By a healthy margin, they approved a measure eliminating the 30-foot coastal height limit in the Midway district – a specific change Faulconer himself disavowed in a 2013 interview with Voice of San Diego.

  • Nor will the CIA disavow those controversial efforts entirely.

  • To disavow those moral responsibilities, our tradition suggests, is to not be truly free.

  • Rather than today's young women feeling like the heirs to a glorious legacy, they disavow those who came before.

  • I can completely relate to his struggle of not wanting to disavow his Jewish identity for the sake of his gay identity.

  • There are some pieces of themselves that politicians simply cannot disavow.

  • I wish to disavow any compliment I may have appeared to pay that company in my telegram, for I think they did their bare duty.

  • I do not altogether disavow the title, but I understand it to mean "inquirer."

  • The Prime Minister would never have had the courage to disavow his colleague openly.

  • Neither do they disavow what has come to them through immigration and does not originally belong to their own country.

  • Berkeley had been unwilling to disavow his loyalty to the Crown in 1652 and he was not prepared to do so now.