0 past simple and past participle of repudiate
1 to refuse to accept something or someone as true, good, or reasonable:
Feminist musicians are both expected to speak for all women and asked to claim that they do in order that they can be repudiated.
Uses of their theory must not presuppose the corner-pub meaning of the term, which economists claim to have repudiated.
Seldom have comfort and sensuality been so keenly repudiated in the name of realism.
However, the foreign debt will never be repudiated if the interest rate, and concern for future generations, are sufficiently small and large, respectively.
Many members (including me) felt repudiated and soon resigned.
Radical tolerationists were not, therefore, premature advocates of the permissive society, and they rarely repudiated the puritan campaign for the reformation of manners.
Apparently accepted with little discussion, this was a significant change and one not repudiated prior to the outbreak of war.
Any concept of a ' ' real ' ' centred self is repudiated; the self is a significant absence approximated through simulations, the constructions of our spectators.