0 past simple and past participle of eschew --
1 to avoid something intentionally, or to give something up: --
We won't have discussions with this group unless they eschew violence.
It was based on what are traditionally considered masculine values (reason, objectivity, the mind), and eschewed the traditionally feminine (emotion, the home, the body).
The other response was to embrace the insurgents who, by and large, eschewed the state's injurious activities.
But this has been a book about a tradition whose practitioners consciously eschewed ideas of a sudden or revolutionary rupture with the current system.
However, we talked to a number of very big plans that eschewed modeling altogether, focusing exclusively on investment returns.
Nor is responsibility entirely negative or always eschewed.
Given this, it is curious that potential biological markers of depression and other psychiatric syndromes are often eschewed in favor of strictly behavioral criteria.
Except for religious writings, the authors have generally eschewed the prescriptive and literary sources that have dominated some recent collections on widowhood.
In his conclusion he notes that those who most successfully resisted eschewed radical politics.