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Refuse   /rəfjˈuz/  /rˈɛfjˌuz/  /rɪfjˈuz/   Listen
Refuse

verb
(past & past part. refused; pres. part. refusing)
1.
Show unwillingness towards.  Synonym: decline.  Antonym: accept.
2.
Refuse to accept.  Synonyms: decline, pass up, reject, turn down.  Antonym: accept.
3.
Elude, especially in a baffling way.  Synonyms: defy, resist.  Antonym: lend oneself.
4.
Refuse to let have.  Synonym: deny.  "He denies her her weekly allowance"  Antonym: allow.
5.
Resist immunologically the introduction of some foreign tissue or organ.  Synonyms: reject, resist.
6.
Refuse entrance or membership.  Synonyms: reject, turn away, turn down.  "Black people were often rejected by country clubs"  Antonym: admit.
noun
1.
Food that is discarded (as from a kitchen).  Synonyms: food waste, garbage, scraps.



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"Refuse" Quotes from Famous Books



... not indispensable, not absolutely to be expected, yet in case it were granted as so much of advantage, as a lucro ponatur), but in the most positive and commanding sense it was the business of revelation to refuse all light of this kind. According to all the analogies which explain the meaning of a revelation, it would have been a capital schism in the counsels of Providence, if in one single instance it had condescended ...
— The Posthumous Works of Thomas De Quincey, Vol. II (2 vols) • Thomas De Quincey

... river of Bengal about the beginning of October. Colonel Clive, who then resided at Calcutta, had received information of their design, which he was resolved, at all events, to defeat. He complained to the suba; who, upon such application, could not decently refuse an order to the director and council of Hughley, implying that this armament should not proceed up the river. The colonel, at the same time, sent a letter to the Dutch commodore, intimating that, as he had ...
— The History of England in Three Volumes, Vol.II. - From William and Mary to George II. • Tobias Smollett

... of happiness instead of to years of torment; then his benefactor came to him suddenly, one day, and said, 'Unless you do what I tell you, now—unless you help me to something that I want, I will send you back to prison. Do as I say, and your life shall go on as it is—as you have planned. Refuse, and I will turn you over to the officers, and you will go back to your hell for the remainder ...
— The Eyes of the World • Harold Bell Wright

... pious, blest by fate, The right thou must not violate. Thou, Raghu's son, so famous through The triple world as just and true, Perform thy bounden duty still, Nor stain thy race by deed of ill. If thou have sworn and now refuse Thou must thy store of merit lose. Then, Monarch, let thy Rama go, Nor fear for him the demon foe. The fiends shall have no power to hurt Him trained to war or inexpert, Nor vanquish him in battle field, For Kusik's son the youth will shield. He is incarnate Justice, ...
— The Ramayana • VALMIKI

... to be patient and cautious. About that time Crockett and his associates sent up their cards, but Terry and the more violent of the Governor's followers denounced them as no better than "Vigilantes," and wanted the Governor to refuse even to receive them. I explained that they were not "Vigilantes," that Judge Thornton was a "Law-and-Order" man, was one of the first to respond to the call of the sheriff, and that he went actually to the jail with ...
— Memoirs of Three Civil War Generals, Complete • U. S. Grant, W. T. Sherman, P. H. Sheridan


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