annulled

listen to the pronunciation of annulled
English - English
past of annul
{s} cancelled
annul
To dissolve (a marital union) on the grounds that it is not valid
annul
{v} to make void, abolish, repeal
Annul
to make void, to do away with
Annul
declare invalid; "The contract was annulled"; "void a plea"
Annul
annul by recalling or rescinding; "He revoked the ban on smoking"; "lift an embargo"; "vacate a death sentence"
Annul
To make or declare void or invalid; such as invalidating a contract of marriage
Annul
To make or declare void or invalid; such as invalidating a contract of marriage (LE)
annul
To reduce to nothing; to obliterate
annul
To formally revoke the validity of
annul
{f} cancel; put an end to
annul
To make void or of no effect; to nullify; to abolish; to do away with; used appropriately of laws, decrees, edicts, decisions of courts, or other established rules, permanent usages, and the like, which are made void by component authority
annul
If an election or a contract is annulled, it is declared invalid, so that legally it is considered never to have existed. The marriage was annulled last month. to officially state that a marriage or legal agreement no longer exists (annuller, from annullare, from ad- + nullus )
annulled

    Hyphenation

    an·nulled

    Turkish pronunciation

    änıld

    Pronunciation

    /ˈanəld/ /ˈænəld/

    Etymology

    [ &-'n&l ] (transitive verb.) 15th century. Middle English annullen, from Middle French annuller, from Late Latin annullare, from Latin ad- + nullus not any; more at NULL.
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