0 the act of refusing to accept something or someone as true, good, or reasonable: --
The first of these proposals is merely the repudiation of strong historical, psychological, genetic, or environmental determinism.
His repudiation of excess desire is hypocritical, for it derives from the entrenchment of his own inhibitions and his enslavement to them.
There is a clear repudiation of romantic hermeneutics and, as a consequence, the recognition of multiple meanings.
Finally, women's lawyers may apply for ' judicial repudiation ' on the grounds of incompatibility between the spouses.
It turns out that the stock of debt increases infinitely without repudiation under very general circumstances.
The psychological and moral dimensions become even clearer when we look at the way in which women's lawyers try to prevent repudiation (or revocation).
In this way, displacement of heroic middle-class experts by old boys entailed a renewed repudiation of statist intervention.
It groups them under four defiant nouns - rejection, repudiation, resilience, continuities - words that virtually contain in themselves the thesis of the entire monograph.