renounce
verb
- repudiate, deny
Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /ɹɪˈnaʊns/
noun
Etymology: From Old French renoncier (French renoncer), from Latin renūntiō. Doublet of renunciate.
- An act of renouncing.
verb
Etymology: From Old French renoncier (French renoncer), from Latin renūntiō. Doublet of renunciate.
- To give up, resign, surrender.
“to renounce a title to land or to a throne”
“It is terrible to think of the power of the world even in a redeemed soul. Here was a maid who had drunk of the well of grace and tasted of God's mercies, and yet there were moments when she was ready to renounce her hope.”
- To cast off, repudiate.
“This world I do renounce, and in your sights Shake patiently my great affliction off.”
- To decline further association with someone or something, disown.
- To abandon, forsake, discontinue (an action, habit, intention, etc), sometimes by open declaration.
“[…] some families renounced the use of a certain praenomen which had been disgraced by one of their name […]”
“His son Sidhartha had renounced material life and gone forth in search of enlightment. He received enlightment under a Bodhi tree at Gaya and became Buddha. Ashoka visited Gaya along with Upagupta and had darshan of Sambodhi.”
- To make a renunciation of something.
“He of my sons who fails to make it good, / By one rebellious act renounces to my blood.”
- To surrender formally some right or trust.
“Dryden died without a will, and his widow having renounced, his son Charles administered on June 10.”
- To fail to follow suit; playing a card of a different suit when having no card of the suit led.