| reject | | |
| cull, reject | (n.) | the person or thing that is rejected or set aside as inferior in quality. |
| reject | (v.) | refuse to accept or acknowledge.; "I reject the idea of starting a war"; "The journal rejected the student's paper" |
| decline, pass up, refuse, reject, turn down | (v.) | refuse to accept.; "He refused my offer of hospitality" |
| disapprove, reject | (v.) | deem wrong or inappropriate.; "I disapprove of her child rearing methods" |
| disdain, freeze off, pooh-pooh, reject, scorn, spurn, turn down | (v.) | reject with contempt.; "She spurned his advances" |
| refuse, reject, resist | (v.) | resist immunologically the introduction of some foreign tissue or organ.; "His body rejected the liver of the donor" |
| refuse, reject, turn away, turn down | (v.) | refuse entrance or membership.; "They turned away hundreds of fans"; "Black people were often rejected by country clubs" |
| eliminate, reject, rule out, winnow out | (v.) | dismiss from consideration or a contest.; "John was ruled out as a possible suspect because he had a strong alibi"; "This possibility can be eliminated from our consideration" |
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