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countermand

noun

No English definition recorded for this entry.

L318744 on Wikidata ↗

verb

No English definition recorded for this entry.

L331277 on Wikidata ↗

Wiktionary

Pronunciation: /ˌkaʊntəˈmɑːnd/ / /ˈkaʊntɚˌmænd/ / /ˌkaʊntɚˈmænd/

noun

Etymology: From Old French contremander, from Medieval Latin contramandō, from contra + mandō (“to order; to command”).

  1. An order to the contrary of a previous one.

verb

Etymology: From Old French contremander, from Medieval Latin contramandō, from contra + mandō (“to order; to command”).

  1. To revoke (a former command); to cancel or rescind by giving an order contrary to one previously given.

    Near-synonym: counteract

    to countermand an order for goods

  2. To recall a person or unit with such an order.
  3. To cancel an order for (some specified goods).

    Three of the maids of honour ſent to countermand their birth-day cloaths; two of them burnt all their collections of novels and romances, and ſent to a bookſeller’s in Pall-mall to buy each of them a bible, and Taylor’s holy living and dying.

  4. To counteract, to act against, to frustrate.

    Early on, Ezra gives her a lesson to countermand the endless female impulse to apologise: “Darling, don’t continually say ‘I’m sorry’. Next time you feel like saying ‘I’m sorry’, instead say ‘Fuck you’.”

  5. To prohibit (a course of action or behavior).

    Avicen countermands letting blood in choleric bodles.

  6. To oppose or revoke the command of (someone).

    For us to alter anything, is to lift ourselves against God; and, as it were, to countermand him.

  7. To maintain control of, to keep under command.

    Two thousand horſe ſhal forrage vp and downe, That no reliefe or ſuccour come by land. And all the ſea my Gallies countermaund.