- verbcancel (verb) · cancels (third person present) · cancelled (past tense) · cancelled (past participle) · cancelling (present participle) · canceled (past tense) · canceled (past participle) · canceling (present participle)
- decide or announce that (a planned event) will not take place:"he was forced to cancel his visit"
- annul or revoke (a formal arrangement which is in effect):"his visa had been canceled"
- abolish or make void (a financial obligation):"I intend to cancel your debt to me"
- (of a factor or circumstance) neutralize or negate the force or effect of (another):"the shipping costs canceled out any savings" · "the electric fields may cancel each other out"
- mathematicsdelete (an equal factor) from both sides of an equation or from the numerator and denominator of a fraction:"“‘Divide by 9” cancels out “multiply by 9”"
- publicly boycott or withdraw support from (a person, organization, etc.) for promoting beliefs that are regarded as socially unacceptable:"fans on social media are torn over whether to support or cancel him"
- mark, pierce, or tear (a ticket, check, or postage stamp) to show that it has been used or invalidated.
nouncancel (noun) · cancels (plural noun)- a mark made on a postage stamp to show that it has been used:"a stamp franked and with an adhesive cancel"
- printinga new page or section inserted in a book to replace the original text, typically to correct an error:"a cancel title page"
Originlate Middle English (in the sense ‘obliterate or delete writing by drawing or stamping lines across it’): from Old French canceller, from Latin cancellare, from cancelli ‘crossbars’.Similar and Opposite Wordsverb- decide or announce that (a planned event) will not take place:
- annul or revoke (a formal arrangement which is in effect):
- (of a factor or circumstance) neutralize or negate the force or effect of (another):
Bokep
- To cancel something means to decide that an organized event will not happen, or to stop an order for goods or services that you no longer want123. It also means to make something void, as a contract or other obligation, and to annul it2. For example, you can cancel a hotel reservation, a magazine subscription, or a meeting.Learn more:✕This summary was generated using AI based on multiple online sources. To view the original source information, use the "Learn more" links.Meaning of cancel in English cancel verb uk / ˈkæn.s ə l / us / ˈkæn.s ə l / -ll- or US usually -l- Add to word list B1 [ I or T ] to decide that an organized event will not happen, or to stop an order for goods or services that you no longer want:dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/cancelverb (used with object),can·celed, can·cel·ing or (especially British) can·celled, can·cel·ling. to make void, as a contract or other obligation; annul: to cancel a hotel reservation; to cancel a magazine subscription.www.dictionary.com/browse/cancel[transitive] cancel something to decide that something that has been arranged will not now take placewww.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/definition/engli…
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