51³Ō¹Ļ

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refudiate

[ri-fyoo-dee-eyt]

verb (used with object)

Nonstandard.
refudiated, refudiating 
  1. to reject as untrue or refuse to acknowledge.



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51³Ō¹Ļ History and Origins

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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Lots of those who heard "bigly" for the first time last night assumed it had been a neologism invented by the GOP candidate, much as former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin once urged Muslims to "refudiate" plans for a mosque in lower Manhattan.

From

They’re expressions of beliefs and political and ideological positions that turn out to be intensely unpopular or offensive to a segment of the population, and the press, usually so careful in our language, tosses them in the same linguistic barrel as when Palin said ā€œrefudiateā€ or when President George W. Bush talked about ā€œhow hard it is to put food on your family.ā€

From

Think about the buzzwords of the recent past — dial-up, chad, Y2K, refudiate — for a sense of how quickly we move on.

From

Like Sarah Palin’s ā€œrefudiateā€ or Anthony Weiner’s repeated sexting faux pas, Bachmann’s serial killer faux pas was tantalizing click-bait—a snarky jab at a favorite target—too good to pass up.

From

While it’s great for Sarah Palin that she can circumnavigate the ā€œlamestreamā€ media using Facebook and Twitter, with that power comes a certain responsibility to not send tweets using the word ā€œrefudiate.ā€

From

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