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Meaning of refudiate | Babel Free

Verb CEFR B2
/ɹɪˈfjuː.di.eɪt/

Definitions

To repudiate, to oppose.

nonstandard

Examples

“Blends are the simplest kind of slip of the tongue […] some examples […] "refudiating" (refuting + repudiating).”
“[…] their articles were read to determine whether the citation was to substantiate or refudiate the initial claim or was it a "quote of acceptance".”
“‘Captain Blip? Never,’ he said, without ceasing to calculate. ‘I refudiate that.’ ‘You what?’ Jane felt suddenly cold all over. ‘There’s no such word, Denny.’”
“The value of given data can and must be judged regardless of the hypothesis they are supposed to support or refudiate.”
“I am going to do everything I can along with the Chairman to see this Congress refudiate the certification of certain countries that are not complying.”
“a. 2008, Alan Moore writes in the subsection, Dr. Manhattan: Super-powers and the Superpowers, pg. iii, of Chapter IV, in Watchmen The suggestion that the presence of a superhuman has inclined the world more towards peace is refudiated by the sharp increase in both Russian and American nuclear stockpiles since the advent of Dr. Manhattan.”
“Words are coined on the spot, like “refudiate,” and regular words are used in ways that make sense only in context.”
“Palin tweeted that "peaceful Muslims" should "refudiate" the New York mosque being built near Ground Zero. This prompted plenty of retweets at her expense -- "refudiate," of course, is not a word.”
“G.L.'s post reminded me that "malamanteau" could in fact be quite useful, if we reduced its meaning to simply "an erroneous and and unintentional portmanteau". This would cover "refudiate" and others like it.”
“In a move that will no doubt confirm some people’s suspicions about US English, the New Oxford American Dictionary’s Word of the Year for 2010 isn’t even a word. Refudiate – renowned intellect Sarah Palin’s mangling of ‘refute’ and ‘repudiate’ into one Frankenstein of a malamanteau – beat gleek (a fan of the TV show Glee), nom nom (an expression of the deliciousness of food) and vuvuzela (a deafening torture device that resembles a trumpet) for the honours.”

CEFR level

B2
Upper Intermediate
This word is part of the CEFR B2 vocabulary — upper intermediate level.

See also

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