0 past simple and past participle of abrogate --
1 to end a law, agreement, or custom formally: --
The treaty was abrogated in 1929.
2 to avoid something that you should do: --
Laws stopped being enforced even before they were formally abrogated.
As a result of this alteration, binding can be increased, decreased, abrogated or induced, leading to changes in the level, timing and localisation of gene expression.
For the adjective abrogated, for example, we may not find any term that is obviously close, but several words are close enough to exert some influence.
This blockade is abrogated when the expectancies of the animals about the location of the platform do not match the actual situation during the probe trial.
The debate, however, was not whether the statute should be abrogated or ignored, but how nobility itself should be understood in a society undergoing change.
Her rule, in which law is completely abrogated, is a disaster (and even she finally admits to being ' perplext ').
Their support, in effect, abrogated the need for a broad-based state.
As this example illustrates, no single word stands out as an obvious analogue for abrogated.