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”).
- 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”).
- 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”
- To recall a person or unit with such an order.
- 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.”
- 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’.””
- To prohibit (a course of action or behavior).
“Avicen countermands letting blood in choleric bodles.”
- 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.”
- 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.”