disregard
noun
No English definition recorded for this entry.
L319601 on Wikidata ↗verb
- to not pay attention to, treat as unworthy of regard or notice
Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /dɪsɹɪˈɡɑːd/ / /dɪsɹɪˈɡɑɹd/
noun
Etymology: From dis- + regard. Compare misregard.
- The act or state of deliberately not paying attention or caring about something.
“The government's blithe disregard for the needs of disabled people is outrageous.”
“The guard was paying no attention whatever to the running of his train, in total disregard of rules, and, as the recently-published report of a Ministry of Transport Inspecting Officer of Railways shows, there were other disquieting features in the case, such as ignorance on the part of responsible men of rules and appendix instructions and a lax attitude to regulations of which they professed to be aware, combined with failure to look at staff notice boards.”
verb
Etymology: From dis- + regard. Compare misregard.
- To ignore; to pay no attention to.
“If you break the law, they will send you a letter. You disregard that they will send someone with a suit to your house. If you disregard Suit-Boy, you will be sent a subpoena. You disregard that they will send men with guns and dogs to your house.”
“Half of the mock jurors that were told he had insurance were told to disregard that information. Mock jurors who were instructed to disregard the information awarded the defendant more money than participants who did not know the defendant had insurance, or knew that he had insurance but were not told to disregard this information.”