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abjure

/æbˈdʒʊɹ/
IPA guide

Other forms: abjured; abjuring; abjures

Abjure means to swear off, and it applies to something you once believed. You can abjure a religious faith, you can abjure your love of another person, and you can abjure the practice of using excessive force in interrogation.

Abjure is a more dramatic way to declare your rejection of something you once felt or believed. When you see its Latin roots, it makes sense: from ab- (meaning "away") and jurare ("to swear"). When you abjure something, you swear it away and dissociate yourself with it. You might abjure the field of astrology after receiving a bad fortune, or you might abjure marriage after a bitter divorce.

Definitions of abjure
  1. verb
    formally reject or disavow a formerly held belief, usually under pressure
    “She abjured her beliefs”
    synonyms: forswear, recant, resile, retract
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