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  1. to act according to what you have been asked or ordered to do by someone in authority, or to behave according to a rule, law, or instruction: The soldiers refused to obey ( orders). to obey the rules of international law. See also. obedient. Thesaurus: synonyms, antonyms, and examples. to obey someone or something.

  2. The meaning of OBEY is to follow the commands or guidance of. How to use obey in a sentence.

  3. Obey definition: to comply with or follow the commands, restrictions, wishes, or instructions of. See examples of OBEY used in a sentence.

  4. When you obey, you follow someone's rules or instructions. In the old days, all of a monarchy's citizens were expected to obey the commands of their king or queen. You might be expected to obey the rules your strict parents lay down, or to obey the guidelines of a group or club you belong to.

  5. OBEY meaning: 1. to act according to what you have been asked or ordered to do by someone in authority, or to…. Learn more.

  6. transitive verb. 1. to comply with or follow the commands, restrictions, wishes, or instructions of. to obey one's parents. 2. to comply with or follow (a command, restriction, wish, instruction, etc.) 3. (of things) to respond conformably in action to. The car obeyed the slightest touch of the steering wheel.

  7. obey. verb. /əˈbeɪ/ [transitive, intransitive] Verb Forms. to do what you are told or expected to do. obey something to obey a command/an order/rules/the law. He was arrested when he failed to obey a police instruction to stop. He has turned into an efficient soldier, blindly obeying orders (= without questioning them).

  8. 1. To carry out or fulfill the command, order, or instruction of. 2. To carry out or comply with (a command, for example). v.intr. To behave obediently. [Middle English obeien, from Old French obeir, from Latin oboedīre, to listen to : ob-, to; see ob- + audīre, to hear; see au- in Indo-European roots .] o·bey′er n.

  9. to do what you are told to do by a person, rule, or instruction: If you refuse to obey the law, you'll be arrested. He gave the command, and we obeyed. Opposite. disobey. Fewer examples. Candidates must obey the rules. Office workers must obey the basic safety rules. The plane obeys the laws of aerodynamics.

  10. Origin of Obey. From Anglo-Norman obeir, obeier et al., Old French obeir, from Latin oboedire (also obÄ“dÄ«re (“to listen to, harken, usually in extended sense, obey, be subject to, serve" )), from ob- (“before, near" ) + audÄ«re (“to hear" ). Compare audient.