Suggestions(1)
Dictionary
to rebuffs
verb
To refuse; to offer sudden or harsh resistance; to turn down or shut out.
Exact(1)
His epistolary outbursts are generally connected to rebuffs in romance brought on by a severe case of stinginess; he is a tightwad who suspects that some sharpie or fickle girlfriend is always trying to put one over on him.
Similar(57)
Marks & Spencer continued to rebuff Mr. Green on Tuesday.
My repeated efforts to rebuff one character after misguidedly kissing him seemed to have no effect.
Yet Mr Clinton appeared to rebuff a request to increase American quotas for Bangladeshi clothing.
Many entrepreneurs look at Facebook's ability to rebuff suitors as an inspiration to stay independent.
But erosion is a perennial enemy, and efforts to rebuff it, continual.
Q. Have you had to rebuff any advances from female classmates? A. That's not happened.
Elegance, and great expanses of painted boiserie, survive to rebuff the surveillance cameras.
Others see a conscious maneuver to rebuff Europe now with the aim of extracting concessions later.
In the past, its all-out drive for growth has led it to rebuff pressure to cut emissions.
Mr. Espada called reporters yesterday to the upscale Manhattan restaurant Bouley to rebuff the charges.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com