| 1. | to direct (an assembly of persons) to disperse or go: I dismissed the class early. |
| 2. | to bid or allow (a person) to go; give permission or a request to depart. |
| 3. | to discharge or remove, as from office or service: to dismiss an employee. |
| 4. | to discard or reject: to dismiss a suitor. |
| 5. | to put off or away, esp. from consideration; put aside; reject: She dismissed the story as mere rumor. |
| 6. | to have done with (a subject) after summary treatment: After a perfunctory discussion, he dismissed the idea. |
| 7. | Law. to put out of court, as a complaint or appeal. |
dis·miss (dĭs-mĭs') tr.v. dis·missed, dis·miss·ing, dis·miss·es
[Middle English dismissen, from Medieval Latin dismittere, dismiss-, variant of Latin dīmittere : dī-, dis-, apart; see dis- + mittere, to send.] dis·miss'i·ble adj., dis·mis'sion (-mĭsh'ən) n. Synonyms: These verbs mean to terminate the employment of: was dismissed for insubordination; was booted for being late; afraid of being bounced for union activities; wasn't canned because his uncle owns the business; will be cashiered from the army; resort workers discharged at the end of the season; was dropped for incompetence; was fired unjustly; a reporter sacked for revealing a confidential source. See Also Synonyms at eject. |