rebuffing

listen to the pronunciation of rebuffing
English - English
present participle of rebuff
rebuff
To refuse; to offer sudden or harsh resistance; to turn down or shut out
rebuff
A sudden resistance or refusal

He was surprised by her quick rebuff to his proposal.

rebuff
a peremptory or unexpected rejection of advances or approaches
rebuff
{n} a denial, quick and sudden resistance
rebuff
{v} to beat back, repel, oppose, discourage
rebuff
Sudden check; unexpected repulse; defeat; refusal; repellence; rejection of solicitation
rebuff
an instance of driving away or warding off
rebuff
To beat back; to offer sudden resistance to; to check; to repel or repulse violently, harshly, or uncourteously
rebuff
To buff again
rebuff
a deliberate discourteous act (usually as an expression of anger or disapproval) an instance of driving away or warding off reject outright and bluntly; "She snubbed his proposal
rebuff
If you rebuff someone or rebuff a suggestion that they make, you refuse to do what they suggest. His proposals have already been rebuffed by the Prime Minister. = reject Rebuff is also a noun. The results of the poll dealt a humiliating rebuff to Mr Jones. an unkind or unfriendly answer to a friendly suggestion or offer of help = snub (Early rebuffer, from ribuffare )
rebuff
Repercussion, or beating back; a quick and sudden resistance
rebuff
a deliberate discourteous act (usually as an expression of anger or disapproval)
rebuff
{f} reject, snub, refuse
rebuff
force or drive back; "repel the attacker"; "fight off the onslaught"; "rebuff the attack"
rebuff
{i} rejection, snub, refusal
rebuff
reject outright and bluntly; "She snubbed his proposal"
rebuffing
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