recant

recant
I
(New American Roget's College Thesaurus)
v. t. withdraw, take back, renounce, retract, disavow, repudiate. See penitence, nullification
II
(Roget's IV) v.
Syn. retract, revoke, renounce, disavow, disclaim, abjure, deny, take back, cancel, back down, back out, withdraw, rescind, abrogate, forswear, contradict, repudiate, abnegate, annul, void, countermand, recall, call back, disown, unsay, nullify, repeal, draw in one's horns*, eat crow*, be of another mind*, eat humble pie*, eat one's words*, eat one's hat*; see also abandon 1 .
Ant. acknowledge*, maintain, proclaim.
III
(Roget's 3 Superthesaurus) (VOCABULARY WORD) v.
[ri KANT]
to take back statements formerly made.
He recanted his story in view of the overwhelming evidence against him.
SYN.: take back, withdraw, disavow, retract, back down, disclaim, recall, *eat one's words, reverse, revoke.
ANT.: acknowledge, confirm, *own up, admit
IV
(Roget's Thesaurus II) verb To disavow (something previously written or said) irrevocably and usually formally: abjure, recall, retract, take back, withdraw. See ACCEPT.

English dictionary for students. 2013.

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  • recant — re·cant /ri kant/ vt: to renounce or withdraw (prior statements or testimony) surprised the prosecution by recant ing statements made earlier to the police vi: to renounce or withdraw prior statements or testimony re·can·ta·tion /ˌrē ˌkan tā… …   Law dictionary

  • Recant — Re*cant (r[ e]*k[a^]nt ), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Recanted}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Recanting}.] [L. recantare, recantatum, to recall, recant; pref. re re + cantare to sing, to sound. See 3d {Cant}, {Chant}.] To withdraw or repudiate formally and publicly …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Recant — Re*cant , v. i. To revoke a declaration or proposition; to unsay what has been said; to retract; as, convince me that I am wrong, and I will recant. Dryden. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • recant — (v.) 1530s, from L. recantare recall, revoke, from re back (see RE (Cf. re )) + cantare to chant (see CANT (Cf. cant) (1)). A word from the Reformation. Loan translation of Gk. palinoidein recant, from palin back + …   Etymology dictionary

  • recant — retract, *abjure, renounce, forswear Analogous words: withdraw, remove …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • recant — [v] take back something said abjure, abnegate, abrogate, annul, apostatize, back down, back off, back out, backtrack*, call back, cancel, contradict, countermand, deny, dial back*, disavow, disclaim, disown, eat one’s words*, forswear, go back on …   New thesaurus

  • recant — ► VERB ▪ renounce a former opinion or belief. DERIVATIVES recantation noun. ORIGIN Latin recantare revoke , from cantare sing, chant …   English terms dictionary

  • recant — [ri kant′] vt., vi. [L recantare < re , back, again + cantare, freq. of canere, to sing: see CHANT] to withdraw or renounce (beliefs or statements formerly held), esp. in a formal or public manner recantation [rē΄kan tā′shən] n. recanter n …   English World dictionary

  • recant — verb 1) he was forced to recant his political beliefs Syn: renounce, disavow, deny, repudiate, renege on; formal forswear, abjure 2) he refused to recant Syn: change one s mind, be apostate; rare tergiversate 3) …   Thesaurus of popular words

  • recant — [[t]rɪkæ̱nt[/t]] recants, recanting, recanted VERB If you recant, you say publicly that you no longer hold a set of beliefs that you had in the past. [FORMAL] Alarmed by the furor the letter created, White House officials ordered Williams to… …   English dictionary

  • recant — UK [rɪˈkænt] / US verb [intransitive/transitive] Word forms recant : present tense I/you/we/they recant he/she/it recants present participle recanting past tense recanted past participle recanted formal 1) to say that something you said was not… …   English dictionary

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