Need another word that means the same as “overrode”? Find 30 related words for “overrode” in this overview.
Table Of Contents:
Associations of "Overrode" (30 Words)
abolish | Formally put an end to (a system, practice, or institution. Slavery was abolished in the mid 19th century in America and in Russia. |
abrogate | Evade (a responsibility or duty. A proposal to abrogate temporarily the right to strike. |
abrogation | The repeal or abolition of a law, right, or agreement. |
annihilate | Defeat utterly. A crusade to annihilate evil. |
annul | Cancel officially. The contract was annulled. |
cancel | A notation cancelling a previous sharp or flat. A cancel title page. |
counterbalance | A compensating equivalent. His restoration to power was intended as a counterbalance to his rival s influence. |
countermand | Cancel officially. The election commission has countermanded voting on the grounds of intimidation. |
delete | Remove (data) from a computer’s memory. You can use delete to remove a number of lines from your program. |
deregulation | The removal of regulations or restrictions, especially in a particular industry. Banks were allowed to grant mortgages following financial deregulation. |
disavow | Deny any responsibility or support for. Her husband disavowed her after 30 years of marriage and six children. |
exterminate | Kill en masse; kill on a large scale; kill many. Hitler wanted to exterminate the Jews Gypsies Communists and homosexuals of Europe. |
finish | Come or bring to a finish or an end. Almost an inspiration which gives to all work that finish which is almost art. |
invalidate | Declare invalid. A technical flaw in her papers invalidated her nomination. |
negate | Make ineffective by counterbalancing the effect of. This action will negate the effect of my efforts. |
neutralize | Get rid of (someone who may be a threat) by killing. She neutralized the solution. |
null | Combine a signal with another in order to create a null cancel out. The tumour can be more readily identified by nulling the high signal from bone marrow. |
nullify | Declare invalid. Judges were unwilling to nullify government decisions. |
reject | The person or thing that is rejected or set aside as inferior in quality. His body rejected the liver of the donor. |
remove | Remove something concrete as by lifting pushing or taking off or remove something abstract. Remove a case to another court. |
repeal | The act of abrogating; an official or legal cancellation. The House voted in favour of repeal. |
repudiation | Rejecting or disowning or disclaiming as invalid. The breach is not so serious as to amount to a repudiation of the whole contract. |
rescind | Revoke, cancel, or repeal (a law, order, or agreement. The government eventually rescinded the directive. |
rescission | (law) the act of rescinding; the cancellation of a contract and the return of the parties to the positions they would have had if the contract had not been made. The plaintiff agreed to the rescission of the agreement. |
reversible | Capable of being reversed or used with either side out. The entropy change is zero only in the limiting case of a reversible process. |
revocable | Capable of being revoked or cancelled. A revocable settlement. |
revoke | Fail to follow suit when able and required to do so. He revoked the ban on smoking. |
terminate | Terminate the employment of discharge from an office or position. The chain terminated in an iron ball covered with spikes. |
vacate | Leave behind empty; move out of. The Justices vacated a ruling by the federal appeals court. |
veto | A rejection by right of veto. The president vetoed the bill. |