View example sentences and word forms for Repudiating.
Repudiating meaning
present participle and gerund of repudiate
Example sentences (14)
And she was notably absent when the former president gave a speech at Mar-a-Lago repudiating the charges against him.
I find her self-identification as a Catholic particularly infuriating since she does so while publicly repudiating an article of Church doctrine that has remained unchanged for over two millennia.
Meloni's rapid ascent to power was closely tied to the transformation of her Brothers of Italy party, which moved into the mainstream without fully repudiating its post-fascist roots.
As new metrics emerged, commentators and coaches took pride in repudiating them.
He was referring to the case of St. Thomas More, the English Catholic martyr who resisted signing an oath repudiating papal authority and acknowledging the right of King Henry VIII to run the church in England.
How about Boeing repudiating its corporate move to Chicago and heading for Birmingham or Huntsville, Ala., instead?
In addition, each orange segment had a few seeds that had to be spit out – a gesture of spitting out and repudiating the homophobia of traditional Judaism.
In repudiating the 1943 Mukaj agreement under pressure from the Yugoslavs, Albania's communists had consented to restore Kosovo to Yugoslavia after the war.
Lang's second government was elected in November 1930 on a policy of repudiating New South Wales' debt to British bondholders and using the money instead to help the unemployed through public works.
Most former Weathermen have successfully re-integrated into mainstream society, without necessarily repudiating their original intent.
Perhaps surprisingly, it was the dying Edward himself who feared a return to Catholicism, and wrote a new will repudiating the 1544 will of Henry VIII.
Rather than repudiating the priest, Nestorius intervened on his behalf.
Second World War seeAlso In August 1945, after repudiating the Soviet–Japanese Neutrality Pact, the Soviet Union invaded southern Sakhalin.
The Soviet state was by then heavily promoting a politically sustainable style of art called Socialist Realism —a style Malevich had spent his entire career repudiating.