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- Dictionaryrevoke/rɪˈvəʊk/
verb
- 1. officially cancel (a decree, decision, or promise): "the men appealed and the sentence was revoked"
- 2. (in bridge, whist, and other card games) fail to follow suit despite being able to do so.
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Revoke means to say officially that an agreement, permission, a law, etc. is no longer in effect. Learn more about the meaning, usage, and pronunciation of revoke with synonyms and examples from the Cambridge Dictionary.
- English (US)
REVOKE meaning: 1. to say officially that an agreement,...
- Znaczenie Revoke, Definicja W Cambridge English Dictionary
revoke definicja: 1. to say officially that an agreement,...
- Revoke: Russian Translation
REVOKE translate: отменять, лишать чего-либо . Learn more in...
- Revoke: Polish Translation
REVOKE translate: unieważniać, odbierać, uchylać,...
- Revoke Spanish Translation
REVOKE translate: revocar, revocar. Learn more in the...
- Revoke: Czech Translation
revoke - translate into Czech with the English-Czech...
- Revoke Turkish Translation
REVOKE translate: geri almak, feshetme, iptal etmek;...
- Revoke: Indonesian Translation
revoke translate: mencabut. Learn more in the Cambridge...
- English (US)
REVOKE meaning: 1. to say officially that an agreement, permission, a law, etc. is no longer in effect: 2. to say…. Learn more.
Learn the meaning, synonyms, examples, and history of the verb revoke, which means to annul by recalling or taking back. Find out how to use revoke in a card game, a legal context, or a sentence.
Revoke definition: to take back or withdraw; annul, cancel, or reverse; rescind or repeal. See examples of REVOKE used in a sentence.
Revoke means to cancel, withdraw, or annul something such as a law, a licence, or an agreement. Learn how to use revoke in a sentence, see its synonyms, and compare it with related words such as recall, rescind, and renege.
Revoke means to take back or withdraw something official or valid, or to fail to follow suit in a card game. See the origin, synonyms, antonyms, and usage of revoke in different contexts and languages.
When you revoke something, you officially cancel it, like when you revoke your sister's "coolest sibling" award because she shows your friends funny pictures of you from when you were little. The verb revoke comes from the Latin word revocare, meaning "to call back or rescind."