Related Searches
on Ask.com
cancelled - 2 dictionary results
can⋅cel
[kan-suh
l]
verb, -celed, -cel⋅ing or (especially British
) -celled, -cel⋅ling, noun –verb (used with object)
| 1. | to make void; revoke; annul: to cancel a reservation. |
| 2. | to decide or announce that a planned event will not take place; call off: to cancel a meeting. |
| 3. | to mark or perforate (a postage stamp, admission ticket, etc.) so as to render invalid for reuse. |
| 4. | to neutralize; counterbalance; compensate for: His sincere apology canceled his sarcastic remark. |
| 5. | Accounting.
|
| 6. | Mathematics. to eliminate by striking out a factor common to both the denominator and numerator of a fraction, equivalent terms on opposite sides of an equation, etc. |
| 7. | to cross out (words, letters, etc.) by drawing a line over the item. |
| 8. | Printing. to omit. |
–verb (used without object)
| 9. | to counterbalance or compensate for one another; become neutralized (often fol. by out): The pros and cons cancel out. |
| 10. | Mathematics. (of factors common to both the denominator and numerator of a fraction, certain terms on opposite sides of an equation, etc.) to be equivalent; to allow cancellation. |
–noun
| 11. | an act of canceling. |
| 12. | Printing, Bookbinding.
|
Origin:
1350–1400; ME cancellen < ML cancellāre to cross out, L: to make like a lattice, deriv. of cancellī grating, pl. of cancellus; see cancellus
1350–1400; ME cancellen < ML cancellāre to cross out, L: to make like a lattice, deriv. of cancellī grating, pl. of cancellus; see cancellus

Related forms:
can⋅cel⋅a⋅ble; especially British, can⋅cel⋅la⋅ble, adjective
can⋅cel⋅er; especially British, can⋅cel⋅ler, noun
Synonyms:
1. countermand, rescind. 3, 7. Cancel, delete, erase, obliterate indicate that something is no longer to be considered usable or in force. To cancel is to cross something out by stamping a mark over it, drawing lines through it, or the like: to cancel a stamp, a word. To delete is to cross something out from written matter or from matter to be printed, often in accordance with a printer's or proofreader's symbol indicating the material is to be omitted: to delete part of a line. To erase is to remove by scraping or rubbing: to erase a capital letter. To obliterate is to blot out entirely, so as to remove all sign or trace of: to obliterate a record.
1. countermand, rescind. 3, 7. Cancel, delete, erase, obliterate indicate that something is no longer to be considered usable or in force. To cancel is to cross something out by stamping a mark over it, drawing lines through it, or the like: to cancel a stamp, a word. To delete is to cross something out from written matter or from matter to be printed, often in accordance with a printer's or proofreader's symbol indicating the material is to be omitted: to delete part of a line. To erase is to remove by scraping or rubbing: to erase a capital letter. To obliterate is to blot out entirely, so as to remove all sign or trace of: to obliterate a record.
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.
Cite This Source
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.
Cite This Source
|
Link To cancelled
can·cel (kān'səl) v. can·celed also can·celled, can·cel·ing also can·cel·ling, can·cels also can·cels v. tr.
To neutralize one another; counterbalance: two opposing forces that canceled out. n.
[Middle English cancellen, from Old French canceller, from Latin cancellāre, to cross out, from cancellus, lattice, diminutive of cancer, lattice.] can'cel·a·ble adj., can'cel·er n. |
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2009 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
Cite This Source
Copyright © 2009 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
Cite This Source
>

