revoke

/rɪˈvoʊk/
verbIntermediate
⚖️Law
formal

to officially cancel or withdraw something, especially a legal right, permission, or document

The court revoked the suspect's bail after he failed to appear.

The court canceled the suspect's bail because he did not show up.

The university revoked the student's scholarship for academic misconduct.

The university withdrew the student's scholarship due to cheating.

💡

Often used in legal or formal contexts to describe the cancellation of rights, licenses, or permissions.

Collocations

revoke a licenseto officially cancel a permit or authorizationrevoke a decisionto withdraw or cancel a previously made decisionrevoke a contractto legally cancel or void an agreement

Synonyms

Antonyms

Related Phrases

revoke and annulphrase
to officially cancel and declare invalid

💡Pro Tip

Formal Context

Use 'revoke' in formal or legal settings, such as when discussing licenses, contracts, or legal decisions.

Gold Rule

Legal Usage

In legal contexts, 'revoke' is often used to describe the cancellation of rights, permissions, or documents.

📖Word Origin

From Middle English 'revoken,' from Old French 'revocer,' from Latin 'revocare,' meaning 'to call back.'

📝Usage Notes

The word 'revoke' is typically used in formal or legal contexts. It implies an official or authoritative cancellation of something previously granted.

Word Breakdown

re-
back
prefix
+
-voke
to call
root
English Dictionary