Yahoo Malaysia Web Search

Search results

  1. Dictionary
    recant
    /rɪˈkant/

    verb

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. to announce in public that your past beliefs or statements were wrong and that you no longer agree with them: After a year spent in solitary confinement, he publicly recanted (his views ). Synonyms. abjure formal. retract formal. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Denying & contradicting. abnegate. abnegation. breath.

  3. The meaning of RECANT is to withdraw or repudiate (a statement or belief) formally and publicly : renounce. How to use recant in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Recant.

  4. RECANT meaning: 1. to announce in public that your past beliefs or statements were wrong and that you no longer…. Learn more.

  5. If you recant, you say publicly that you no longer hold a set of beliefs that you had in the past.

  6. If you're someone who speaks before you think, you may need to recant, or take back, that overly honest assessment of your friend's new haircut. Recant comes from two Latin roots: the prefix re-, meaning "back," and the verb cantare, meaning "to sing."

  7. verb (used with object) to withdraw or disavow (a statement, opinion, etc.), especially formally; retract. Synonyms: deny, rescind, recall, revoke.

  8. Define recant. recant synonyms, recant pronunciation, recant translation, English dictionary definition of recant. withdraw or disavow; revoke, rescind, deny: He recanted his confession. Not to be confused with: cant – insincere; the private language of the underworld;...

  9. Definition of recant verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  10. Recant definition: To make a formal retraction or disavowal of (a statement or belief to which one has previously committed oneself).

  11. If you recant, you say publicly that you no longer hold a set of beliefs that you had in the past.