1 abjure | Definition of abjure

abjure

verb
abĀ·​jure | \ ab-ĖˆjuĢ‡r How to pronounce abjure (audio) \
abjured; abjuring

Definition of abjure

transitive verb

formal
1a : to renounce upon oath He abjured his allegiance to his former country.
b : to reject solemnly She abjured her old beliefs.
2 : to abstain from : avoid abjure extravagance

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Other Words from abjure

abjurer noun

Choose the Right Synonym for abjure

abjure, renounce, forswear, recant, retract mean to withdraw one's word or professed belief. abjure implies a firm and final rejecting or abandoning often made under oath. abjured the errors of his former faith renounce may carry the meaning of disclaim or disown. renounced abstract art and turned to portrait painting forswear may add an implication of perjury or betrayal. I cannot forswear my principles recant stresses the withdrawing or denying of something professed or taught. if they recant they will be spared retract applies to the withdrawing of a promise, an offer, or an accusation. the newspaper had to retract the story

Did You Know?

Just as a jury swears to produce an unbiased verdict, and a witness swears to tell the truth on pain of perjury, those who abjure their former ways "swear them away." "Abjure" (as well as "jury" and "perjury") comes from Latin jurare, which means "to swear" (and which in turn is based on the root jus, meaning "law"), plus the prefix ab-, meaning "away." These days, we can casually abjure (that is, abstain from) vices such as smoking or overeating, but in the 15th and 16th centuries to abjure was a matter of renouncing something under oath-and sometimes a matter of life and death. For example, during the Spanish Inquisition, individuals were given the choice between abjuring unacceptable beliefs and being burned at the stake.

Examples of abjure in a Sentence

abjured some long-held beliefs when she converted to another religion a strict religious sect that abjures the luxuries, comforts, and conveniences of the modern world

Recent Examples on the Web

That trenchant rhyme is an outlier among Mr. Caleā€™s lyrics, which generally abjure technical polish in favor of imagery and emotion. New York Times, "Review: Surviving a Family From Hell in ā€˜Weā€™re Only Aliveā€™," 27 June 2019 Riders abjure helmets, and a strict rule that two people may never share one scooter is strictly ignored throughout. Alan Behr, chicagotribune.com, "When Paris does what it does best," 20 Aug. 2019 Most dramatically, Lara meets an artist unlike the others ā€” a German Dadaist who has abjured silly painterly posturing for serious aesthetic discipline (and sculpture). Globe Correspondent, BostonGlobe.com, "Guggenheim-inspired ā€˜Costalegreā€™ is a smart and sentimental journey into adolescence," 24 July 2019 That did not mean abjuring love as a subject, but rather ennobling it while understanding its limitations. Jesse Green, New York Times, "A Brief History of Gay Theater, in Three Acts," 26 Feb. 2018 Thankfully, few proponents of normcore politics explicitly go as far as Wittes in exhorting Trumpā€™s opponents to abjure conventional policy issues. Matthew Yglesias, Vox, "Donald Trump, the resistance, and the limits of normcore politics," 3 July 2018 Most dramatically, Lara meets an artist unlike the others ā€” a German Dadaist who has abjured silly painterly posturing for serious aesthetic discipline (and sculpture). Globe Correspondent, BostonGlobe.com, "Guggenheim-inspired ā€˜Costalegreā€™ is a smart and sentimental journey into adolescence," 24 July 2019 Where the commercial fishery runs on the acquisition of fish for private profiit, the subsistence is part of an indigenous economy that abjures hoarding and celebrates the sharing of a bounty whose creatures are assigned both intelligence and souls. Richard Adams Carey, WSJ, "ā€˜Kings of the Yukonā€™ Review: A Song for the Salmon," 25 May 2018 After Spain passed a law banning parties that supported terrorism, some of the groupā€™s leaders created a new party, EH Bildu, which abjured violence. The Economist, "Spainā€™s ETA Basque terrorists disband," 9 May 2018

These example sentences are selected automatically from various online news sources to reflect current usage of the word 'abjure.' Views expressed in the examples do not represent the opinion of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.

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First Known Use of abjure

15th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1a

History and Etymology for abjure

Middle English abjuren, borrowed from Anglo-French & Medieval Latin; Anglo-French abjurer, borrowed from Medieval Latin abjÅ«rāre, "to repudiate, renounce (a right or claim), swear to stay away from," going back to Latin, "to deny knowledge of falsely under oath, repudiate," from ab- ab- + jÅ«rāre "to swear" ā€” more at jury entry 1

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More Definitions for abjure

abĀ·​jure | \ ab-ĖˆjuĢ‡r, əb- How to pronounce abjure (audio) \
abjured; abjuring

Legal Definition of abjure

: renounce specifically : to disclaim formally or renounce upon oath solemnly abjures his allegiance to his former country

Other Words from abjure

abjuration \ ĖŒab-​jə-​Ėˆrā-​shən How to pronounce abjuration (audio) \ noun

History and Etymology for abjure

Latin abjurare, from ab- off + jurare to swear