| disregard | | |
| n. (cognition) | 1. disregard, neglect | lack of attention and due care. |
| ~ inattention | lack of attention. |
| ~ omission | neglecting to do something; leaving out or passing over something. |
| n. (act) | 2. disregard, neglect | willful lack of care and attention. |
| ~ mistreatment | the practice of treating (someone or something) badly.; "he should be punished for his mistreatment of his mother" |
| ~ despite | contemptuous disregard.; "she wanted neither favor nor despite" |
| v. (communication) | 3. cut, disregard, ignore, snub | refuse to acknowledge.; "She cut him dead at the meeting" |
| ~ do by, treat, handle | interact in a certain way.; "Do right by her"; "Treat him with caution, please"; "Handle the press reporters gently" |
| v. (communication) | 4. brush aside, brush off, discount, dismiss, disregard, ignore, push aside | bar from attention or consideration.; "She dismissed his advances" |
| ~ cold-shoulder, slight | pay no attention to, disrespect.; "She cold-shouldered her ex-fiance" |
| ~ reject | refuse to accept or acknowledge.; "I reject the idea of starting a war"; "The journal rejected the student's paper" |
| ~ discredit | cause to be distrusted or disbelieved.; "The paper discredited the politician with its nasty commentary" |
| ~ shrug off | minimize the importance of, brush aside.; "Jane shrugged off the news that her stock had fallen 3 points" |
| ~ pass off | disregard.; "She passed off the insult" |
| ~ flout, scoff | treat with contemptuous disregard.; "flout the rules" |
| ~ turn a blind eye | refuse to acknowledge.; "He turns a blind eye to the injustices in his office" |
| ~ laugh away, laugh off | deal with a problem by laughing or pretending to be amused by it.; "She laughs away all these problems" |
| ~ disoblige | ignore someone's wishes. |
| v. (cognition) | 5. disregard, ignore, neglect | give little or no attention to.; "Disregard the errors" |
| ~ pretermit | disregard intentionally or let pass. |
| downplay | | |
| v. (communication) | 1. downplay, minimise, minimize, understate | represent as less significant or important. |
| ~ inform | impart knowledge of some fact, state or affairs, or event to.; "I informed him of his rights" |
| ~ trivialise, trivialize | make trivial or insignificant.; "Don't trivialize the seriousness of the issue!" |
| v. (change) | 2. background, downplay, play down | understate the importance or quality of.; "he played down his royal ancestry" |
| ~ wave off | dismiss as insignificant.; "He waved off suggestions of impropriety" |
| ~ soft-pedal | play down or obscure.; "His advisers soft-pedaled the president's blunder" |
| ~ accent, accentuate, emphasize, stress, emphasise, punctuate | to stress, single out as important.; "Dr. Jones emphasizes exercise in addition to a change in diet" |
| play down | | |
| brush off | | |
| ignore | | |
| v. (perception) | 1. ignore | fail to notice. |
| ~ pass up | fail to acknowledge.; "he passed me up in the street" |
| v. (cognition) | 2. ignore | be ignorant of or in the dark about. |
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