Advertisement
Advertisement
refudiate
[ri-fyoo-dee-eyt]
verb (used with object)
to reject as untrue or refuse to acknowledge.
51³Ō¹Ļ History and Origins
Origin of refudiate1
Example Sentences
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.
Theyāre 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 ārefudiateā or when President George W. Bush talked about āhow hard it is to put food on your family.ā
Think about the buzzwords of the recent past ā dial-up, chad, Y2K, refudiate ā for a sense of how quickly we move on.
Like Sarah Palinās ārefudiateā or Anthony Weinerās repeated sexting faux pas, Bachmannās serial killer faux pas was tantalizing click-baitāa snarky jab at a favorite targetātoo good to pass up.
While itās great for Sarah Palin that she can circumnavigate the ālamestreamā media using Facebook and Twitter, with that power comes a certain responsibility to not send tweets using the word ārefudiate.ā
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse