DISPROVE vs DENY: NOUN
- N/A
- Denial.
DISPROVE vs DENY: VERB
- Prove to be false
- Deny formally (an allegation of fact by the opposing party) in a legal suit
- Refuse to recognize or acknowledge
- Refuse to accept or believe
- Declare untrue; contradict
- Refuse to grant, as of a petition or request
- Deny oneself (something); restrain, especially from indulging in some pleasure
- Refuse to let have
- To not allow.
- To assert that something is not true.
- To prevent from scoring.
- To disallow
- To refuse to give or grant something to someone
DISPROVE vs DENY: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To answer in ��� negative; to declare an assertion not to be true.
DISPROVE vs DENY: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To prove to be false or erroneous; to confute; to refute.
- To disallow; to disapprove of.
- To prove to be false, invalid, or in error; refute.
- To declare untrue; assert to be false.
- To refuse to believe; reject.
- To refuse to recognize or acknowledge; disavow.
- To decline to grant or allow; refuse.
- To give a refusal to; turn down or away.
- To declare not to be true; to gainsay; to contradict; -- opposed to affirm, allow, or admit.
- To refuse (to do something or to accept something); to reject; to decline; to renounce.
- To refuse to grant; to withhold; to refuse to gratify or yield to.
- To disclaim connection with, responsibility for, and the like; to refuse to acknowledge; to disown; to abjure; to disavow.
- To decline the gratification of appetites or desires; to practice self-denial.
- To restrain (oneself) especially from indulgence in pleasures.
DISPROVE vs DENY: OTHER WORD TYPES
- To prove to be false or erroneous; confute; refute: as, to disprove an assertion, an argument, or a proposition.
- To prove not to be genuine, real, or just; set aside by contrary proof; invalidate: as, to disprove a person's claim to land.
- To convict of the practice of error.
- To disapprove; disallow.
- To say “no” or “nay” to; gainsay; contradict.
- To declare to be untrue or untenable; reject as false or erroneous; refuse to admit, accept, or believe: as, to deny an accusation, or the truth of a statement or a theory; to deny a, doctrine.
- To refuse; refuse to grant or give; withhold or withhold from: as, to deny bread to the hungry; to deny a request.
- To reject as non-existent or unreal; refuse to believe in the existence of; disallow the reality of.
- To refuse access to; keep from being seen; withhold from view or intercourse: as, he denied himself to visitors.
- To refuse to acknowledge; disavow; renounce; disown.
- To forbid.
- To contradict; repel; disprove.
- Synonyms To disclaim, renounce, abjure.
- To answer in the negative; refuse to comply.
- Deny oneself (something)
- Contradict
- Declare untrue
DISPROVE vs DENY: RELATED WORDS
- Overturn, Reject, Invalidate, Repudiate, Quash, Negate, Deny, Dismiss, Gainsay, Contradict, Prove, Dispel, Confute, Rebut, Refute
- Denial, Overrule, Disprove, Nullify, Oppose, Ignore, Disavow, Disallow, Deprive, Negate, Dismiss, Reject, Refute, Traverse, Refuse
DISPROVE vs DENY: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Topple, Counter, Reject, Invalidate, Repudiate, Quash, Negate, Deny, Dismiss, Contradict, Prove, Dispel, Confute, Rebut, Refute
- Resist, Denial, Overrule, Disprove, Nullify, Oppose, Ignore, Disallow, Deprive, Negate, Dismiss, Reject, Refute, Traverse, Refuse
DISPROVE vs DENY: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- ICE could not prove or disprove his citizenship.
- It is all right to disprove your hypothesis.
- There is ample experience globally to disprove this.
- And of course you cannot disprove Idealism, right?
- Researchers work to nullify or disprove null hypotheses.
- People have tried to disprove it ever since.
- Information which may support or disprove a claim.
- State must then disprove beyond a reasonable doubt.
- To disprove the existence of these miracles is to disprove the existence of this Christ.
- One must hypothesize, design an experiment that can potentially disprove the hypothesis, and see if indeed it does disprove the hypothesis.
- Such laws wrongfully deny ballot access to political candidates and groups and further deny the voters their right to consider all legitimate alternatives.
- Digitized by Go i igle deny it, Sir; I deny it in toto!
- For each one we must admit, deny, or say there is not enough knowledge to admit or deny the allegation.
- If they deny the reality of those entities, they deny the Bible, and thus their faith.
- The frustrated Pharisees cannot deny the reality of the miracle, but they can deny that it came from God.
- And therefore, in order to deny the God of the Pentateuch, they must deny that Moses wrote the Pentteuch.
- Or we can deny our brokenness, foreswear compassion, and, as a result, deny our own humanity.
- You can only deny this possibility if in fact YOU DENY THAT GOD IS SOVEREIGN.
- If the account is not yours, you deny it and deny making payments.
- They can deny and deny and deny but that kind of sickness will soon show up.
DISPROVE vs DENY: QUESTIONS
- Do alternate start codons disprove the common ancestor theory?
- Does quantum mechanics disprove absolute determinism at small scale?
- Does the invention of lying disprove its own message?
- Can pictures from space disprove the flat Earth theory?
- What experiment did Redi conduct to disprove abiogenesis?
- Did the Pinkertons plant evidence to disprove unions?
- How did scientists disprove the vital force theory?
- Did'methbusters'disprove 2 iconic'Breaking Bad'moments?
- Why do researchers reject or disprove null hypotheses?
- How did Louis Pasteur disprove the spontaneous generation?
- Can health insurance deny coverage for preexisting conditions?
- Does Congress deny equal protection to habitual drunkards?
- Did Wanda Vazquez deny obstruction of Justice allegations?
- Can parents deny special education for their child?
- What must one deny to accommodate the supererogatory?
- How do insurance claim adjusters deny homeowners claims?
- Does Dominus Iesus deny salvation to non-Christians?
- Do proponents of penal substitution deny comparatives?
- Can Taurus deny warranty without registration card?
- Does partisanship deny constitutional legitimacy to impeachment?