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  1. Dictionary
    jettison
    /ˈdʒɛtɪs(ə)n/

    verb

    noun

    • 1. the action of jettisoning something: "the jettison lever"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. to get rid of something or someone that is not wanted or needed: The station has jettisoned educational broadcasts. to decide not to use an idea or plan: We've had to jettison our trip because of David's accident. to throw goods, fuel, or equipment from a ship or aircraft to make it lighter:

  3. The meaning of JETTISON is to get rid of as superfluous or encumbering : omit or forgo as part of a plan or as the result of some other decision. How to use jettison in a sentence. The Origin of Jettison

  4. to get rid of something or someone that is not wanted or needed: The station has jettisoned educational broadcasts. to decide not to use an idea or plan: We've had to jettison our trip because of David's accident. to throw goods, fuel, or equipment from a ship or aircraft to make it lighter:

  5. If you jettison something, for example an idea or a plan, you deliberately reject it or decide not to use it.

  6. Jettison definition: to cast (goods) overboard in order to lighten a vessel or aircraft or to improve its stability in an emergency.. See examples of JETTISON used in a sentence.

  7. Definition of jettison verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  8. Definitions of 'jettison'. 1. If you jettison something, for example an idea or a plan, you deliberately reject it or decide not to use it. [...] 2. To jettison something that is not needed or wanted means to throw it away or get rid of it. [...] More.

  9. Dictionary.com Unabridged Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2024 How to use jettison in a sentence jettison your lawyers as a source of prison-yard guidance, Abramoff said.

  10. JETTISON definition: 1. to get rid of something you do not want or need: 2. If an aircraft or a ship jettisons…. Learn more.

  11. jettison. From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English jet‧ti‧son /ˈdʒetəsən, -zən/ verb [transitive] 1 to get rid of something or decide not to do something any longer The scheme was jettisoned when the government found it too costly. 2 to throw things away, especially from a moving plane or ship → See Verb table Examples from ...