0 past simple and past participle of revoke --
1 to say officially that an agreement, permission, a law, etc. is no longer in effect: --
The authorities have revoked their original decision to allow development of this rural area.
If both parties were agreeable, the agreement might be revoked altogether.
If no compensation is payable because a planning permission has been voided instead of simply being revoked, they will not be able to pay compensation.
Derogations are not permanent as they can be amended or revoked at any time.
Certainly one can drive the car back to a point it has already visited (reversible action), but the original action cannot be revoked as if it never happened (irrevocable).
These bans were never formally revoked.
In several parts of the province, authorities hastily revoked it, without however succeeding in appeasing the rebels.
As we have seen above, once that land has been allocated the allottee's rights over it cannot be revoked except under certain circumstances.
Consent can be revoked very easily in general research.