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    abolish
    /əˈbɒlɪʃ/

    verb

    • 1. formally put an end to (a system, practice, or institution): "the tax was abolished in 1977"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Learn the meaning of abolish, a verb that means to end an activity or custom officially. See how to use abolish in different contexts and domains, with examples from the Cambridge English Corpus.

  3. Learn the meaning, synonyms, examples, and history of the verb abolish, which means to end the observance or effect of something completely. Find out how to use abolish in a sentence and see related words and entries.

  4. Abolish, eradicate, stamp out mean to do away completely with something. To abolish is to cause to cease, often by a summary order: to abolish a requirement. Stamp out implies forcibly making an end to something considered undesirable or harmful: to stamp out the opium traffic.

  5. to end an activity or custom officially: I think bullfighting should be abolished. Congress abolished the draft in 1973, at the end of the Vietnam War. Fewer examples. The government ought to abolish the tax altogether. The government is planning to abolish subsidies to farmers. Is monarchy relevant in the modern world or should it be abolished?

  6. Abolish means to officially end a law, a system or an institution. Learn how to use this verb with pictures, pronunciation, collocations and synonyms from Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary.

  7. Learn the meaning of abolish, a verb that means to do away with or put an end to something, such as a system, practice, or law. Find synonyms, pronunciation, word origin, and usage examples from various sources.

  8. To abolish is to get rid of or annul. So when the principal yells at you for the 100th time for not having your shirt tucked in, it's safe to wish they'd just abolish the silly dress code.

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