1. to reject as having no authority or binding force.
2. to disown: to repudiate a son.
3. to reject with disapproval or condemnation.
4. to reject with denial: to repudiate an accusation.
5. to refuse to acknowledge and pay (a debt).
To reject, cast off, disown, renounce, refuse to accept as one's own; also,
to reject as false, deny the authority of, refuse to accept as true.
Repudiate suggests a formal, often vehement (VEE-uh-mint, the h is
silent) rejection. You can repudiate a child, reject or disown the child; you
can repudiate a belief, cast it off or renounce it; you can repudiate a claim,
deny its authority; and you can repudiate a charge, reject it as untrue.
Make_It_Happen
1. to reject as having no authority or binding force. 2. to disown: to repudiate a son. 3. to reject with disapproval or condemnation. 4. to reject with denial: to repudiate an accusation. 5. to refuse to acknowledge and pay (a debt).
王二狗Mark
To reject, cast off, disown, renounce, refuse to accept as one's own; also, to reject as false, deny the authority of, refuse to accept as true. Repudiate suggests a formal, often vehement (VEE-uh-mint, the h is silent) rejection. You can repudiate a child, reject or disown the child; you can repudiate a belief, cast it off or renounce it; you can repudiate a claim, deny its authority; and you can repudiate a charge, reject it as untrue.