dismiss
dis·miss / disˈmis/ • v. [tr.] order or allow to leave; send away: she dismissed the taxi at the corner of the road. ∎ discharge from employment or office: CBS Records dismissed another 120 people. ∎ treat as unworthy of serious consideration: it would be easy to dismiss him as all brawn and no brain. ∎ deliberately cease to think about: he suspected a double meaning in her words, but dismissed the thought. ∎ [intr.] (of a group assembled under someone's authority) disperse: he told his company to dismiss. ∎ Law refuse further hearing to (a case): the judge dismissed the case for lack of evidence. ∎ (in sports) defeat or end an opponent’s turn.DERIVATIVES: dis·miss·al / -əl/ n.dis·miss·i·ble adj.
dismiss
dismiss XV. First in pp., repr. OF. desmis (mod. démis) :- medL. dismissus, for L. dīmissus, pp. of dīmittere, f. DIS- 1 + mittere send.
So dismission XVI; after F. †desmission (mod. dé-); largely repl. by dismissal XIX.
So dismission XVI; after F. †desmission (mod. dé-); largely repl. by dismissal XIX.
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