reject

reject
verb
ADVERB
decisively, emphatically, firmly, resoundingly, roundly, soundly, strongly, vehemently, vigorously

Voters emphatically rejected the proposals.

She firmly rejected the suggestion that she had lied.

categorically, completely, flatly, unequivocally, utterly
out of hand, outright, summarily

Don't just reject their suggestions out of hand.

overwhelmingly
unanimously
narrowly

Voters narrowly rejected the plan.

initially
immediately, instantly
quickly
consistently, constantly, repeatedly
eventually, finally, ultimately

We considered offering him the job, but finally rejected him.

deliberately
explicitly, expressly, specifically

The paper expressly rejected charges that it had invented the story.

formally
publicly
automatically

The organs are automatically rejected by the immune system.

rightly

It was a badly researched product that consumers rightly rejected.

VERB + REJECT
vote to
be free to, have the right to

Consumers have the right to reject faulty goods and demand a refund.

urge sb to

He urged the committee to reject the plans.

PREPOSITION
as

The proposal was rejected as too costly.

in favour/favor of

Their design was rejected in favour/favor of one by a rival company.

PHRASES
reject sth on … grounds

The plan was rejected on economic grounds.

Reject is used with these nouns as the subject: ↑conference, ↑congress, ↑court, ↑judge, ↑parliament, ↑tribunal, ↑union, ↑voter
Reject is used with these nouns as the object: ↑accusation, ↑advice, ↑allegation, ↑amendment, ↑apology, ↑appeal, ↑applicant, ↑application, ↑argument, ↑assertion, ↑authority, ↑ban, ↑bid, ↑bill, ↑call, ↑candidate, ↑charge, ↑claim, ↑complaint, ↑compromise, ↑constitution, ↑contention, ↑creed, ↑criticism, ↑deal, ↑demand, ↑doctrine, ↑dogma, ↑excuse, ↑hypothesis, ↑idea, ↑ideology, ↑implication, ↑initiative, ↑interpretation, ↑label, ↑manuscript, ↑motion, ↑move, ↑offer, ↑overture, ↑package, ↑petition, ↑philosophy, ↑plan, ↑plea, ↑practice, ↑proposal, ↑proposition, ↑reasoning, ↑recommendation, ↑religion, ↑report, ↑request, ↑resignation, ↑resolution, ↑scheme, ↑stereotype, ↑submission, ↑suggestion, ↑teaching, ↑theory, ↑thesis, ↑tradition, ↑transplant, ↑treaty, ↑view, ↑violence

Collocations dictionary. 2013.

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  • Reject — EP par Anti Flag, Against All Authority Sortie 1996 Durée 12:29 Genre Punk rock Label A F Records Records of Rebellion …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Reject — Re*ject (r? j?kt ), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Rejected}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Rejecting}.] [L. rejectus, p. p. of reicere, rejicere; pref. re re + jacere to throw: cf. F. rejeter, formerly also spelt rejecter. See {Jet} a shooting forth.] [1913 Webster] 1 …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • reject — re·ject /ri jekt/ vt: to refuse to accept, acknowledge, or grant compare revoke Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996. reject …   Law dictionary

  • reject — (v.) early 15c., from L. rejectus, pp. of reicere to throw back, from re back (see RE (Cf. re )) + icere, comb. form of iacere to throw (see JET (Cf. jet) (v.)). Related: Rejected; rejecting. The noun is first …   Etymology dictionary

  • reject — vb repudiate, spurn, refuse, *decline Analogous words: *discard, cast, shed: oust, expel, dismiss, *eject: *exclude, debar, shut out, eliminate Antonyms: accept: choose, select …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • reject — is pronounced with the stress on the first syllable as a noun and with the stress on the second syllable as a verb …   Modern English usage

  • reject — [v] say no to burn*, cashier*, cast aside, cast off, cast out, chuck, decline, deny, despise, disallow, disbelieve, discard, discount, discredit, disdain, dismiss, eliminate, exclude*, give thumbs down to*, jettison, jilt, kill*, nix*, not buy*,… …   New thesaurus

  • reject — ► VERB 1) dismiss as inadequate or faulty. 2) refuse to consider or agree to. 3) fail to show due affection or concern for. 4) Medicine show a damaging immune response to (a transplanted organ or tissue). ► NOUN ▪ a rejected person or thing.… …   English terms dictionary

  • reject — [ri jekt′; ] for n. [ rē′jekt] vt. [LME rejecten < L rejectus, pp. of reicere, rejicere, to throw or fling back < re , back + jacere, to throw: see JET1] 1. to refuse to take, agree to, accede to, use, believe, etc. 2. to discard or throw… …   English World dictionary

  • reject — ▪ I. reject re‧ject 2 [ˈriːdʒekt] noun [countable] a product which is not good enough and will be thrown away or sold cheaply: • If the number of rejects exceeds this level, the batch is returned.   [m0] ▪ II. reject re‧ject 1 [rɪˈdʒekt] verb… …   Financial and business terms

  • reject — I UK [rɪˈdʒekt] / US verb [transitive] Word forms reject : present tense I/you/we/they reject he/she/it rejects present participle rejecting past tense rejected past participle rejected *** 1) a) to not agree to an offer, proposal, or request It… …   English dictionary

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