| 1. | to state that (something declared or believed to be true) is not true: to deny an accusation. |
| 2. | to refuse to agree or accede to: to deny a petition. |
| 3. | to withhold the possession, use, or enjoyment of: to deny access to secret information. |
| 4. | to withhold something from, or refuse to grant a request of: to deny a beggar. |
| 5. | to refuse to recognize or acknowledge; disown; disavow; repudiate: to deny one's gods. |
| 6. | to withhold (someone) from accessibility to a visitor: The secretary denied his employer to all those without appointments. |
| 7. | Obsolete. to refuse to take or accept. |
| 8. | deny oneself, to refrain from satisfying one's desires or needs; practice self-denial. |
de·ny (dĭ-nī') tr.v. de·nied, de·ny·ing, de·nies
[Middle English denien, from Old French denier, from Latin dēnegāre : dē-, de- + negāre, to say no; see ne in Indo-European roots.] Synonyms: These verbs mean to refuse to admit the existence, truth, or value of: denied the rumor; contradicted the statement; contravene a conclusion; disaffirm a suggestion; trying to gainsay the evidence; negated the allegations; traverse an indictment. |