Withdraw
51withdraw — with·draw …
52withdraw — verb 1) she withdrew her hand from his Syn: remove, extract, pull out, take out, take back 2) the ban on advertising was withdrawn Syn: abolish, cancel, lift, set aside, end, stop …
53withdraw — To take away what has been enjoyed; to take from. To remove, as deposits from bank, or oneself from competition, candidacy, etc. See also withdrawal …
54withdraw — v. (past withdrew; past part. withdrawn) 1 tr. pull or take aside or back (withdrew my hand). 2 tr. discontinue, cancel, retract (withdrew my support; the promise was later withdrawn). 3 tr. remove; take away (withdrew the child from school;… …
55withdraw a motion — take back a proposal from the docket …
56withdraw from — retreat from …
57withdraw from the Golan Heights — retreat from the the Golan Heights …
58withdraw the question — remove a question from the record in an investigation or trial …
59withdraw your labour — to go on strike Trade union jargon. It could simply mean to go home or to change your employment …
60withdraw from — to leave or move away from an unsatisfactory or dangerous situation (withdrawal) …