Need another word that means the same as “vote”? Find 69 synonyms and 30 related words for “vote” in this overview.
The synonyms of “Vote” are: right to vote, suffrage, ballot, balloting, voting, voter turnout, poll, election, referendum, plebiscite, public vote, general election, local election, straw poll, show of hands, franchise, enfranchisement, voting rights, go to the polls, cast one's vote, mark one's ballot paper, elect, return, put in power, select, choose, pick, adopt, appoint, designate, opt for, plump for, decide on, settle on, fix on, depose, oust, push out, turn out, remove from office, remove from power, unseat, dethrone, displace, dismiss, discharge, dislodge, eject, cashier, suggest, propose, recommend, advocate, move, submit, veto, defeat, vote down, rule against, reject, throw out, overrule, stop, block, put a stop to, put an end to, quash, overturn, disallow
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “vote” as a noun can have the following definitions:
ballot | The total number of votes cast in a ballot. The commissioners were elected by ballot. |
balloting | A choice that is made by counting the number of people in favor of each alternative. |
election | A formal and organized choice by vote of a person for a political office or other position. They celebrated his election. |
enfranchisement | The act of certifying or bestowing a franchise on. Legal costs attributable to the enfranchisement of leasehold properties. |
franchise | A business or service given a franchise to operate. Lagers brewed under franchise. |
general election | A fact about the whole (as opposed to particular. |
local election | Public transport consisting of a bus or train that stops at all stations or stops. |
plebiscite | The direct vote of all the members of an electorate on an important public question such as a change in the constitution. The administration will hold a plebiscite for the approval of constitutional reforms. |
poll | The counting of votes (as in an election. The country went to the polls on March 10. |
public vote | A body of people sharing some common interest. |
referendum | A legislative act is referred for final approval to a popular vote by the electorate. |
right to vote | The piece of ground in the outfield on the catcher’s right. |
show of hands | Pretending that something is the case in order to make a good impression. |
straw poll | A variable yellow tint; dull yellow, often diluted with white. |
suffrage | The right to vote in political elections. Universal adult suffrage. |
voter turnout | A citizen who has a legal right to vote. |
voting | A choice that is made by counting the number of people in favor of each alternative. |
voting rights | A choice that is made by counting the number of people in favor of each alternative. |
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “vote” as a verb can have the following definitions:
adopt | Take on a certain form, attribute, or aspect. The committee voted 5 1 to adopt the proposal. |
advocate | Push for something. Voters supported candidates who advocated an Assembly. |
appoint | Assign a duty, responsibility or obligation to. She has been appointed to the board. |
block | Support secure or raise with a block. Block the wheels of a car. |
cashier | Discharge with dishonor, as in the army. Cashier the literal sense of this word. |
cast one's vote | Form by pouring (e.g., wax or hot metal) into a cast or mold. |
choose | Pick out select or choose from a number of alternatives. I ll stay as long as I choose. |
decide on | Cause to decide. |
defeat | Win a victory over. Don t cheat by allowing your body to droop this defeats the object of the exercise. |
depose | Make a deposition; declare under oath. He had been deposed by a military coup. |
designate | Decree or designate beforehand. He was designated as prime minister. |
dethrone | Sit on the throne as a ruler. He dethroned the defending title holder. |
disallow | Command against. He was offside and the goal was disallowed. |
discharge | Go off or discharge. The swelling will eventually break down and discharge pus. |
dislodge | Change place or direction. The new employee dislodged her by moving into her office space. |
dismiss | Order or allow to leave; send away. This case is dismissed. |
displace | Take over the place, position, or role of. Thousands of people have been displaced by the civil war. |
eject | Leave an aircraft rapidly using an ejection seat or capsule. Lumps of viscous lava were ejected from the volcano. |
elect | Select by a vote for an office or membership. They elected him leader. |
fix on | Make fixed, stable or stationary. |
go to the polls | Enter or assume a certain state or condition. |
mark one's ballot paper | Insert punctuation marks into. |
move | Change location move travel or proceed also metaphorically. We must move quickly. |
opt for | Select as an alternative over another. |
oust | Remove and replace. The reformists were ousted from power. |
overrule | Reject or disallow by exercising one’s superior authority. Welfare staff overruled an experienced detective. |
overturn | Cause to overturn from an upright or normal position. The results overturned previous findings. |
pick | Hit lightly with a picking motion. Pick pockets. |
plump for | Make fat or plump. |
propose | Propose or intend. The senator proposed to abolish the sales tax. |
push out | Move strenuously and with effort. |
put a stop to | Cause (someone) to undergo something. |
put an end to | Formulate in a particular style or language. |
put in power | Attribute or give. |
quash | Declare invalid. A hospital executive quashed rumours that nursing staff will lose jobs. |
recommend | Advise or suggest (something) as a course of action. I devoutly recommended my spirit to its maker. |
reject | Reject with contempt. His body could begin to reject the implanted heart. |
remove from office | Go away or leave. |
remove from power | Dispose of. |
return | Return in kind. The point returned to the interior of the figure. |
rule against | Keep in check. |
select | Pick out select or choose from a number of alternatives. The commonest phenotype in a population can be selected against. |
settle on | Settle conclusively; come to terms. |
stop | Make a rope fast with a stopper. He stopped work for tea. |
submit | Refer for judgment or consideration. The panel s report was submitted to a parliamentary committee. |
suggest | Suggest the necessity of an intervention in medicine. A simpler explanation suggested itself to me. |
throw out | Organize or be responsible for. |
turn out | Cause to move around or rotate. |
unseat | Cause (someone) to fall from a horse or bicycle. The Republicans are trying to unseat the liberal Democrat. |
veto | Exercise a veto against a decision or proposal. The President vetoed the bill. |
vote down | Be guided by in voting. |
abstention | Restraint in one’s consumption; abstinence. A resolution passed by 126 votes to none with six abstentions. |
ballot | Vote by ballot. If the offer is oversubscribed acceptances will be balloted. |
candidate | A person who applies for a job or is nominated for election. Candidates applying for this position should be computer literate. |
choose | Pick out select or choose from a number of alternatives. I ll stay as long as I choose. |
chosen | One who is the object of choice; who is given preference. He is by no means a forerunner in his chosen field. |
cloture | A rule for limiting or ending debate in a deliberative body. Cloture the discussion. |
constituency | A group of voters in a specified area who elect a representative to a legislative body. A parliamentary candidate in the Hampstead and Highgate constituency. |
democracy | A state governed under a system of democracy. Demands for greater democracy. |
democratic | Belong to or relating to the Democratic Party. Cycling is a very democratic activity which can be enjoyed by anyone. |
democratize | Become (more) democratic; of nations. Public institutions need to be democratized. |
elect | Selected as the best. The members who were elected to the committee. |
election | A formal and organized choice by vote of a person for a political office or other position. She agreed to stand for election. |
elective | A course that the student can select from among alternatives. Elective official. |
elector | In the US a member of the electoral college. Close to 60 per cent of the 60 000 registered electors voted. |
electorate | The area represented by one Member of Parliament. 75 per cent of the electorate voted for a Scottish parliament in some form. |
enfranchise | Give the right to vote to. Slaves were enfranchised in the mid 19th century. |
favour | Promote over another. I ve come to ask you a favour. |
hustings | The activities involved in political campaigning (especially speech making. Mrs Jones organized two public hustings. |
incoming | Arriving at a place or position. An incoming call. |
interdiction | Authoritative prohibition. The interdiction of the slave trade. |
pick | Attack with or as if with a pickaxe of ice or rocky ground for example. He sent the first picking of berries to the market. |
plebiscite | A vote by the electorate determining public opinion on a question of national importance. The administration will hold a plebiscite for the approval of constitutional reforms. |
politics | The activities associated with the governance of a country or area, especially the debate between parties having power. Unemployment dominated the politics of the inter war years. |
poll | Convert into a pollard. Over half of those polled do not believe the prime minister usually tells the truth. |
president | An executive officer of a firm or corporation. The president of the European Union. |
presidential | Befitting a president. The French presidential election. |
referendum | A legislative act is referred for final approval to a popular vote by the electorate. |
suffrage | A series of petitions pronounced by the priest with the responses of the congregation. The women s suffrage movement. |
suffragette | A woman advocate of women’s right to vote (especially a militant advocate in the United Kingdom at the beginning of the 20th century. |
voter | A person who votes or has the right to vote at an election. |
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