22.03.2013 Views

The Oxford Thesaurus An A-Z Dictionary of Synonyms INTRO ...

The Oxford Thesaurus An A-Z Dictionary of Synonyms INTRO ...

The Oxford Thesaurus An A-Z Dictionary of Synonyms INTRO ...

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

send (someone) away or on his or her or their way, turn one's<br />

back on, Slang give (someone) the brush-<strong>of</strong>f or US also the<br />

brush, give (someone) his or her walking papers, Brit give<br />

(someone) the boot: Ted proposed, but Alice rejected him. 3<br />

throw away or out, discard, disown, jettison, eliminate, scrap,<br />

Colloq junk, scratch: <strong>The</strong> inspector rejects all defective<br />

merchandise.<br />

--n. 4 second, irregular, discard, cast-<strong>of</strong>f: <strong>The</strong> rejects are<br />

sold at reduced prices in the factory shop.<br />

rejection n. refusal, denial, repudiation, rebuff, dismissal, spurning,<br />

renunciation, turn-down; cold shoulder, Slang brush-<strong>of</strong>f or US<br />

also brush, the (old) heave-ho: <strong>The</strong> union voted for the<br />

rejection <strong>of</strong> management's <strong>of</strong>fer <strong>of</strong> a 9.2 per cent increase. Her<br />

advances were met with rejection.<br />

rejoice v. delight, exult, glory, celebrate, revel, be happy or<br />

delighted or pleased or overjoyed or elated or glad, Colloq be<br />

tickled (pink): We all rejoiced to be home once again after the<br />

ordeal.<br />

rejuvenate<br />

v. restore, refresh, reinvigorate, revitalize, revivify, renew,<br />

reanimate, regenerate, recharge, breathe new life into: I think<br />

a week in Barbados would rejuvenate me.<br />

relapse v. 1 get back, backslide, fall back, lapse, slip back, regress,<br />

retrogress, recidivate; go back, return, retreat, revert:<br />

Lottie has relapsed into her bad habits. 2 decline,<br />

deteriorate, weaken, degenerate, fail, fade, sink, sicken,<br />

worsen, get or become worse: Just when we thought he was<br />

improving, he relapsed into a coma and died.<br />

--n. 3 backsliding, falling or going back, lapse, lapsing,<br />

return, returning, reversion, reverting, regression, regressing,<br />

retrogression, retrogressing, recidivism, apostasy: <strong>The</strong><br />

church's main concern was a relapse into idolatry. 4 decline,<br />

deterioration, weakening, degeneration, failing, failure,<br />

fading, sinking, worsening: Barry was getting better but has<br />

now suffered a relapse.<br />

relate v. 1 associate, connect, couple, link, tie, ally, correlate,

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!