Nghĩa của từ recant bằng Tiếng Việt

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Đặt câu có từ "recant"

Dưới đây là những mẫu câu có chứa từ "recant", trong bộ từ điển Từ điển Y Khoa Anh - Việt. Chúng ta có thể tham khảo những mẫu câu này để đặt câu trong tình huống cần đặt câu với từ recant, hoặc tham khảo ngữ cảnh sử dụng từ recant trong bộ từ điển Từ điển Y Khoa Anh - Việt

1. They could not make him recant.

2. White House officials ordered Williams to recant.

3. Abjure: To recant solemnly; renounce or repudiate

4. Though he was forced to change his religion, he recant.

5. Do you plan to recant on your deathbed?

6. The torture can not make the man recant.

7. What if I had to get you recant?

8. They blindfolded Mrs Dyer, roped her neck, and expected her to recant.

9. Editorials would demand that he either recant or retire from public life.

10. • They Blindfolded Mrs Dyer, roped her neck, and expected her to recant

11. Unless you recant your confession, you will be punished severely.

12. Another word for Backtrack: retract, withdraw, retreat, draw back, recant Collins English Thesaurus

13. Smedley immediately went to court, forcing the army to recant publicly.

14. McNamara did not recant at the meeting nor did he apologize.

15. During the Moscow Show Trials in the 1930s, prisoners were forced to publicly recant.

16. There was actually no discussion, but only a demand that he recant.

17. Wealth management is a new term in financial service in recant years.

18. If they failed to recant their practice, the practitioners would be sent to labor camps.

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19. Could your recant the unsatisfied call to make the our investigation more convenient?

20. 10 They blindfolded Mrs Dyer, roped her neck, and expected her to recant.

21. Abjure definition, to renounce, repudiate, or retract, especially with formal solemnity; recant: to Abjure one's errors

22. The magistrate Maximus offered Quirnus the position of priest to Jupiter if he would recant his faith.

23. Refusing to recant his doctrines as heretical, he was condemned to be burnt at the stake at Konstanz.

24. Though he was tortured to make him change his religion, the prisoner would not recant.

25. TYPICAL USE : Though he was tortured to make him change his religion, the prisoner recant.

26. If Amanda Johnston were to recant, and announce that the affair began in school, Woodhead's career would be finished.

27. She also testified that Irvin had terrorized her in an effort to make her recant her testimony against him.

28. AIM:To summarize and analyze the clinical curative effect and usage method of chitosan biological fluid dressing (CBFD) in recant years.

29. Abjure: verb abandon , abrogate , deny , disaffirm , disavow , discard , disclaim , disown , exclude , forgo , give up , recant , refuse to admit , reject , renounce

30. Synonyms for Backpedal include backtrack, recant, retract, reverse, reconsider, rethink, change, relent, flip-flop and change opinion

31. (often with on) retract, withdraw, retreat, draw back, recant, back-pedal The finance minister Backtracked on his decision

32. Giulio Cesare Vanini, one of the most outspoken atheists of his time but who did not recant, was less fortunate.

33. To recant solemnly; renounce or repudiate: "For nearly 21 years after his resignation as Prime Minister in 1963, he Abjured all titles, preferring to …

34. Repudiate, recant, or retract; to renounce under oath, forswear: Abjure allegiance; Abjure a confession Not to be confused with: adjure – to charge or

35. Abjure Meaning: "renounce on oath, repudiate, forswear," originally especially "renounce or recant (a heresy) on oath,"… See definitions of Abjure.

36. Of beggars; hypocrisy, sham, pretense, humbug Not to be confused with: can't – contraction of cannot reCant – withdraw or disavow; revoke, rescind, deny: He reCanted his

37. abjure, renounce, forswear, recant, retract mean to withdraw one's word or professed belief. abjure implies a firm and final rejecting or abandoning often made under oath. Abjured the errors of his …

38. Abjure, renounce, forswear, recant, retract mean to withdraw one's word or professed belief. Abjure implies a firm and final rejecting or abandoning often made under oath. Abjured the errors of his …

39. To recant solemnly; renounce or repudiate: "For nearly 21 years after his resignation as Prime Minister in 1963, he Abjured all titles, preferring to remain just plain 'Mr.'" (Time)

40. Abjure - formally reject or disavow a formerly held belief, usually under pressure; "He retracted his earlier statements about his religion"; "She Abjured her beliefs" forswear , recant , retract , resile

41. Some common synonyms of Abjure are forswear, recant, renounce, and retract. While all these words mean "to withdraw one's word or professed belief," Abjure implies a firm and final rejecting or abandoning often made under oath

42. Many outlets recant tales of Bentley’s peak performing days — wildly successful, a widely open and well-known “Bulldyker” (which was a term for lesbians back in the day), and enjoying all the lavishness that the Black Renaissance had to offer

43. Adduces luettava gaping recant (v.) clear a channel, coat food with flour or crumbs; search; dig, remove earth, dig something up with a dredge, dredger, machine for digging underwater, machine for removing large quantities of earth, earth-mover, search with a dredge, shellfish net, sprin

44. I understood not the True Is- rael; I Recant; I Revoke; and I now make my mostpublic Retraction."41 SectionXI of "Triparadisus,"Mather'sdefinitivestudyof the prophecies,is devoted to dispellingthe consensusthat unlesstheJewishnationbe converted,Christ'sreturnwould not be imminent.In an effortto Accommodatehis new the- ory,Matherin

45. Abjure (v.) early 15c., Abjuren, "renounce on oath, repudiate, forswear," originally especially "renounce or recant (a heresy) on oath," from Old French abjurer and directly from Latin abiurare "deny on oath," from ab "off, away from" (see ab-) + iurare "to swear," from ius (genitive iuris) "law" (see jurist).

46. Abjure (v.) early 15c., Abjuren, "renounce on oath, repudiate, forswear," originally especially "renounce or recant (a heresy) on oath," from Old French abjurer and directly from Latin abiurare "deny on oath," from ab "off, away from" (see ab-) + iurare "to swear," from ius (genitive iuris) "law" (see jurist).