Advertisement
Advertisement
quash
/ kwɒʃ /
verb
to subdue forcefully and completely; put down; suppress
to annul or make void (a law, decision, etc)
to reject (an indictment, writ, etc) as invalid
Other Word Forms
- unquashed adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of quash1
Word History and Origins
Origin of quash1
Example Sentences
Roberts repeated the phrase a couple of times, as if he was determined to quash any speculation about another late-season position change for Betts.
It has raised an ordinary action for reduction - quashing - of the policies relating to schools and prisons, first reported by The Sunday Times.
But he argues police are in an impossible situation because social media is fast moving, and officers need to quash falsehoods as quickly as possible.
France pushed hundreds of thousands of Cameroonians into internment camps and supported brutal militias to quash the independence struggle, the AFP news agency quotes the report as saying.
In the meantime, courts may quash his threatened punishments as illegal or unconstitutional infringements of 1st Amendment rights.
Advertisement
Related Words
- annul
- clamp down on
- crack down on www.thesaurus.com
- invalidate
- overrule
- repeal
- rescind
- reverse
- revoke
- set aside
- squelch
- undo
- vacate
- veto
- void
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse