VividLex

Home / Dictionary / resign

resign

9 senses · Free VividLex dictionary · Thesaurus

  1. 1. v. t. To sign back; to return by a formal act; to yield to another; to surrender; -- said especially of office or emolument. Hence, to give up; to yield; to submit; -- said of the wishes or will, or of something valued; -- also often used reflexively. Source: opted
  2. 2. v. t. To relinquish; to abandon. Source: opted
  3. 3. v. t. To commit to the care of; to consign. Source: opted
  4. 4. v. leave (a job, post, or position) voluntarily Source: wordnet
  5. 5. v. give up or retire from a position Source: wordnet
  6. 6. v. part with a possession or right Source: wordnet
  7. 7. v. accept as inevitable Source: wordnet
  8. 8. 1. To sign back; to return by a formal act; to yield to another; to surrender; -- said especially of office or emolument. Hence, to give up; to yield; to submit; -- said of the wishes or will, or of something valued; -- also often used reflexively. I here resign my government to thee. Shak. Lament not, Eve, but patiently resign What justly thou hast lost. Milton. What more reasonable, than that we should in all things resign up ourselves to the will of God Tiilotson. 2. To relinquish; to abandon. He soon resigned his former suit. Spenser. 3. To commit to the care of; to consign. [Obs.] Gentlement of quality have been sent beyong the seas, resigned and concredited to the conduct of such as they call governors. Evelyn. Syn. -- To abdicate; surrender; submit; leave; relinquish; forego; quit; forsake; abandon; renounce. -- Resign, Relinquish. To resign is to give up, as if breaking a seal and yielding all it had secured; hence, it marks a formal and deliberate surrender. To relinquish is less formal, but always implies abandonment and that the thing given up has been long an object of pursuit, and, usually, that it has been prized and desired. We resign what we once held or considered as our own, as an office, employment, etc. We speak of relinquishing a claim, of relinquishing some advantage we had sought or enjoyed, of relinquishing seme right, privilege, etc. "Men are weary with the toil which they bear, but can not find it in their hearts to relinquish it." Steele. See Abdicate. Source: webster
  9. 9. v:100 v. accept as inevitable Source: ecdict

Thesaurus links

Related headwords in VividLex — dictionary ↔ thesaurus bridge for exploration and SEO depth.

From the definitions

Open full thesaurus page for resign · Language as a Lens

Explore more

Search dictionary Related words Home
resift
resignation