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  1. Dictionary
    quash
    /kwɒʃ/

    verb

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Both essentially mean to get rid of somethingyou can quash a rumor, for example, or you can quash a judicial order. The legal term quash (meaning "to nullify") comes from the Anglo-French words casser or quasser, meaning "to annul," and is ultimately from Latin cassus, "to void."

  3. QUASH definition: 1. to say officially that something, especially an earlier official decision, is no longer to be…. Learn more.

  4. Jun 10, 2024 · quash (third-person singular simple present quashes, present participle quashing, simple past and past participle quashed) To defeat decisively , to suppress . The army quashed the rebellion.

  5. Quash means to put down, stop, extinguish, and it’s usually used to talk about ideas, feelings, or political movements. You wouldn’t quash a grape underfoot; you would squash it. But if you were a military dictator, you would quash a revolution.

  6. Quash definition: to put down or suppress completely; quell; subdue. See examples of QUASH used in a sentence.

  7. quash. verb. /kwɒʃ/ /kwɑːʃ/ Verb Forms. quash something (law) to officially say that a decision made by a court is no longer legally acceptable or correct synonym overturn. His conviction was later quashed by the Court of Appeal. Want to learn more?

  8. 1. to subdue forcefully and completely; put down; suppress. 2. to annul or make void (a law, decision, etc) 3. (Law) to reject (an indictment, writ, etc) as invalid. [C14: from Old French quasser, from Latin quassāre to shake]

  9. If someone quashes rumors, they say or do something to demonstrate that the rumors are not true. Graham attempted to quash rumors of growing discontent in the dressing room. 3. transitive verb. To quash a rebellion or protest means to stop it, often in a violent way.

  10. QUASH definition: 1. to officially change a legal decision so that it stops existing: 2. to stop something that you…. Learn more.

  11. 1. If a court or someone in authority quashes a decision or judgment, they officially reject it. [...] 2. If someone quashes rumours, they say or do something to demonstrate that the rumours are not true. [...] 3. To quash a rebellion or protest means to stop it, often in a violent way. [...] More. Pronunciations of the word 'quash'