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词汇 repudiation
释义

Definition of repudiation in English:

repudiation

noun rɪˌpjuːdɪˈeɪʃnrəˌpjudiˈeɪʃ(ə)n
mass noun
  • 1Rejection of a proposal or idea.

    the repudiation of reformist policies
    count noun a repudiation of left-wing political ideas
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Later in his address, Clinton provided another, inadvertent, testimony to the Democratic Party's repudiation of its liberal past.
    • Ollivier's conclusions are a complete repudiation of the entire heritage of Marxism, including Trotsky's theory of permanent revolution.
    • The day of the referendum, an article in the UK Independent cited mysterious "exit polls" and predicted a massive repudiation of Chavez.
    • The two ideals conflict, and the triumph of the Newtonian ideal is a repudiation, and not an incorporation, of the Aristotelian ideal.
    • Its policies are nothing but a repudiation of what Gandhi and his comrades stood for.
    • They are also anxious about growing popular animosity to the government's repudiation of democratic rights.
    • These holy warriors, frequently labelled fundamentalists, represent a direct engagement with the modern world rather than a simple repudiation.
    • One is the use of a shared repudiation of romanticism to denigrate the Stuart cause.
    • The march showed the incredible support of local residents for the APPO and their repudiation of the federal police intervention.
    • Above all, Byrd has decried the cowardice of Congress in its acceptance of the wholesale repudiation of the US Constitution.
    • The first was the repudiation of the governments socioeconomic policies.
    • It would represent, on the part of an entire section of the ruling elite, the repudiation of elementary democratic norms.
    • Apart from his ritual farewell, Truman's act of self creation is otherwise represented as a repudiation of all social connection.
    • In one of the great ironies of constitutional history, Miller's repudiation of Campbell's arguments in the Slaughter-House Cases inadvertently gave Campbell his greatest victory.
    • The second revolution involved the repudiation of the conviction that well-formed academic learning is a product of our generic humanity.
    • This resulted in its isolation and repudiation by the Algerian masses.
    • Then the president assured corporate America that his administration's repudiation of liberal reformism was irreversible.
    • They avoid open repudiations of their predecessors, no matter how demagogic.
    • Even the supposition of Jewish influence on the media elicited a sharp, immediate repudiation.
    • Indeed, Blair came to power based on an explicit repudiation of its old reformist programme.
    1. 1.1 Refusal to fulfil or discharge an agreement, obligation, or debt.
      count noun the breach is not so serious as to amount to a repudiation of the whole contract
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Donaldson P thought not, as the repudiation of a contract of employment was an exception to the general rule.
      • But the Neutrality Acts of 1935, 1936, and 1937 nevertheless represented a repudiation of Wilsonianism.
      • Any resolution to the war requires the repudiation of the Sri Lankan constitution, which entrenches communalism and the autocratic executive presidency.
      • If a term is a condition precedent to liability, any breach defeats liability but does not lead to a repudiation of the whole contract.
      • Extensive account audit trails were created to minimize repudiation.
      • So it is not open to any court below the House of Lords to find that unlawful repudiation without acceptance terminates the contract of employment.
      • It will be rare for conduct subsequent to a settlement agreement to amount to repudiation.
      • It was not necessary to summarise paragraphs 47 or 48 for the conclusion in paragraph 49 is that there was a repudiation by Alstom.
      • In the past, divorces were settled within the family and the couple would receive a letter of repudiation from an Islamic official.
      • Repudiation of a contract "is a thing writ in water" and of no effect unless accepted.
      • But the earlier repudiation of the Geneva Conventions exposes such claims as lies.
      • Reference to "at the date of acceptance of the repudiation" appears only in the judgment of Megaw LJ.
      • Elizabeth's oath of allegiance in 1559 required the specific repudiation of any jurisdiction by any foreign prince, person, prelate, or potentate.
      • It predicted an inevitable collapse of tsarist finances and proposed the repudiation of the payment of the tsarist debts.
      • The courts are likely to avoid such problems by readily finding acceptance of a repudiation.
      • The code prohibited polygamous marriages and forced marriage for girls, established a minimum age for marriage, and required judicial divorce rather than repudiation.
      • The repudiation of the Treaty of Madrid was taken by this small group one month before the nobles met at Dijon in June 1526.
      • Now, your corporate client was found liable in damages for repudiation.
      • There is no repudiation of an Agreement of Purchase and Sale in the letter.
      • A widespread bankruptcy, default, and repudiation of bonds would necessarily ensue.
      Synonyms
      rejection, renunciation, renouncement, abandonment, forsaking, forswearing, giving up, disavowal, recantation, desertion, discarding, disowning, casting aside
      rare abjuration
      denial, refutation, contradiction, rebuttal, rejection, disclaimer, disavowal
      dismissal
      rare negation
      cancellation, revocation, rescindment, reversal, abrogation, retraction, invalidation, nullification
      Law disaffirmation, disaffirmance, defeasance, avoidance
      rare rescission
  • 2Denial of the truth or validity of something.

Definition of repudiation in US English:

repudiation

nounrəˌpyo͞odēˈāSH(ə)nrəˌpjudiˈeɪʃ(ə)n
  • 1Rejection of a proposal or idea.

    the repudiation of reformist policies
    a repudiation of left-wing political ideas
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Even the supposition of Jewish influence on the media elicited a sharp, immediate repudiation.
    • It would represent, on the part of an entire section of the ruling elite, the repudiation of elementary democratic norms.
    • Indeed, Blair came to power based on an explicit repudiation of its old reformist programme.
    • Its policies are nothing but a repudiation of what Gandhi and his comrades stood for.
    • They avoid open repudiations of their predecessors, no matter how demagogic.
    • These holy warriors, frequently labelled fundamentalists, represent a direct engagement with the modern world rather than a simple repudiation.
    • This resulted in its isolation and repudiation by the Algerian masses.
    • The second revolution involved the repudiation of the conviction that well-formed academic learning is a product of our generic humanity.
    • One is the use of a shared repudiation of romanticism to denigrate the Stuart cause.
    • Ollivier's conclusions are a complete repudiation of the entire heritage of Marxism, including Trotsky's theory of permanent revolution.
    • Apart from his ritual farewell, Truman's act of self creation is otherwise represented as a repudiation of all social connection.
    • The first was the repudiation of the governments socioeconomic policies.
    • They are also anxious about growing popular animosity to the government's repudiation of democratic rights.
    • In one of the great ironies of constitutional history, Miller's repudiation of Campbell's arguments in the Slaughter-House Cases inadvertently gave Campbell his greatest victory.
    • Then the president assured corporate America that his administration's repudiation of liberal reformism was irreversible.
    • Later in his address, Clinton provided another, inadvertent, testimony to the Democratic Party's repudiation of its liberal past.
    • Above all, Byrd has decried the cowardice of Congress in its acceptance of the wholesale repudiation of the US Constitution.
    • The day of the referendum, an article in the UK Independent cited mysterious "exit polls" and predicted a massive repudiation of Chavez.
    • The march showed the incredible support of local residents for the APPO and their repudiation of the federal police intervention.
    • The two ideals conflict, and the triumph of the Newtonian ideal is a repudiation, and not an incorporation, of the Aristotelian ideal.
    1. 1.1 Refusal to fulfill or discharge an agreement, obligation, or debt.
      the breach is not so serious as to amount to a repudiation of the whole contract
      Example sentencesExamples
      • So it is not open to any court below the House of Lords to find that unlawful repudiation without acceptance terminates the contract of employment.
      • But the Neutrality Acts of 1935, 1936, and 1937 nevertheless represented a repudiation of Wilsonianism.
      • The code prohibited polygamous marriages and forced marriage for girls, established a minimum age for marriage, and required judicial divorce rather than repudiation.
      • The courts are likely to avoid such problems by readily finding acceptance of a repudiation.
      • It was not necessary to summarise paragraphs 47 or 48 for the conclusion in paragraph 49 is that there was a repudiation by Alstom.
      • Now, your corporate client was found liable in damages for repudiation.
      • Elizabeth's oath of allegiance in 1559 required the specific repudiation of any jurisdiction by any foreign prince, person, prelate, or potentate.
      • But the earlier repudiation of the Geneva Conventions exposes such claims as lies.
      • Repudiation of a contract "is a thing writ in water" and of no effect unless accepted.
      • In the past, divorces were settled within the family and the couple would receive a letter of repudiation from an Islamic official.
      • Any resolution to the war requires the repudiation of the Sri Lankan constitution, which entrenches communalism and the autocratic executive presidency.
      • There is no repudiation of an Agreement of Purchase and Sale in the letter.
      • It will be rare for conduct subsequent to a settlement agreement to amount to repudiation.
      • A widespread bankruptcy, default, and repudiation of bonds would necessarily ensue.
      • Reference to "at the date of acceptance of the repudiation" appears only in the judgment of Megaw LJ.
      • It predicted an inevitable collapse of tsarist finances and proposed the repudiation of the payment of the tsarist debts.
      • Extensive account audit trails were created to minimize repudiation.
      • If a term is a condition precedent to liability, any breach defeats liability but does not lead to a repudiation of the whole contract.
      • The repudiation of the Treaty of Madrid was taken by this small group one month before the nobles met at Dijon in June 1526.
      • Donaldson P thought not, as the repudiation of a contract of employment was an exception to the general rule.
      Synonyms
      rejection, renunciation, renouncement, abandonment, forsaking, forswearing, giving up, disavowal, recantation, desertion, discarding, disowning, casting aside
      denial, refutation, contradiction, rebuttal, rejection, disclaimer, disavowal
      cancellation, revocation, rescindment, reversal, abrogation, retraction, invalidation, nullification
  • 2Denial of the truth or validity of something.

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