abandon, beg to differ, derogate, disunite, evolve, go back, palinode, renege, set apart, take leave of, withhold assent
Definitionv. pull back or move away or backward
Last update: October 6, 2015
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As the Bill stands doctors could withdraw food and fluid (tubal feeding) from patients thus causing death by dehydration and starvation. [verb]
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Rejecting Mishcon 's pristine typescript draft, Mr Justice Moses invites us to withdraw to draft a suitable Order. [verb]
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"Monsieur de Montcalm pledges his word for our safety, and I have ordered the men to withdraw a little, in order to prove how much we depend on his assurance." [verb]
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She leant against the door for support, and she no longer struggled to withdraw her hands from that strong grasp which held them. [verb]
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She had time to contemplate several evil contingencies while she stood in the hall watching Reuben withdraw various bolts and bars. [verb]
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He will bury her alive in Oxfordshire--withdraw her for ever from this wicked town--like poor Lady Yarborough in Cornwall. [verb]
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"I must withdraw you from your own amiable family," he said, "to involve you in the perplexities of an unhappy man." [verb]
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His glance was directed sidelong towards the coffin, as to an object on which he could not stedfastly look, and yet from which he could not withdraw his eyes. [verb]
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