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  1. Verb. Nevsky is lionized in Russian history as the leader who repulsed several attacks from the west, notably his defeat in 1242 of the Livonian Order that sought to spread Western Catholicism into regions where Eastern Orthodoxy was predominant.

  2. When you repulse the enemy in battle or someone in conversation, you force them back or make them turn away. Repulse is related to the word repel, and they mean similar things: to repulse an advance — romantic or warring — is to repel, or fend off, its advance. To repulse someone by being disgusting is to be repellent.

  3. to push away or refuse something or someone unwanted, especially to successfully stop a physical attack against you: The enemy attack was quickly repulsed. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Responding to an attack. beat. beat someone off. beat someone/something back. capitulate. combat patrol.

  4. Synonyms for REPULSES: rebuffs, dismissals, snubs, rejections, silent treatments, cold shoulders, brush-offs, banishments; Antonyms of REPULSES: open arms, embraces, acceptances, welcomes, glad hands, welcome mats, attracts, tempts

  5. Definition of repulse. as in dismissal. treatment that is deliberately unfriendly the waiter's incredibly rude repulse of our polite request for a better table—one that wasn't right next to the kitchen—prompted us to walk out. Synonyms & Similar Words. Relevance.

  6. us / rɪˈpʌls /. Add to word list. Add to word list. to push someone or something back or away, esp. to successfully stop an attack: The enemy attack was quickly repulsed. If something repulses you, it causes you to have a strong feeling of dislike and want to avoid it.

  7. verb (used with object) , re·pulsed, re·puls·ing. to drive back; repel: to repulse an assailant. to repel with denial, discourtesy, or the like; refuse or reject. Synonyms: snub, shun, spurn, rebuff. to cause feelings of repulsion in: The scenes of violence in the film may repulse some viewers.

  8. Though people are repulsed by it, they also are drawn to its power. [be VERB -ed] 2. verb. If an army or other group repulses a group of people, they drive it back using force. The armed forces were prepared to repulse any attacks.

  9. Definition of repulse verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  10. Find 78 different ways to say REPULSE, along with antonyms, related words, and example sentences at Thesaurus.com.

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