Contravene — Con tra*vene , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Contravened}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Contravening}.] [LL. contravenire; L. contra + venire to come: cf. F. contrevenir. See {Come}.] 1. To meet in the way of opposition; to come into conflict with; to oppose; to… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
contravene — I verb balk, be contrary to, be in conflict with, clash, conflict with, contest, contradict, counteract, cross, defeat, defy, deny, disagree, dispute, disregard, foil, frustrate, gainsay, go against, impugn, infringe, negate, nullify, oppose,… … Law dictionary
contravene — UK US /ˌkɒntrəˈviːn/ verb [T] FORMAL ► to not obey a rule or law, or to not do what you promised: »The toy manufacturer contravened safety codes by using toxic paints on its dolls … Financial and business terms
contravene — 1560s, from M.Fr. contravenir to transgress, decline, depart, from L.L. contravenire to come against, in M.L. to transgress, from L. contra against (see CONTRA (Cf. contra)) + venire to come (see VENUE (Cf. venue)). Related: Contr … Etymology dictionary
contravene — *deny, contradict, traverse, impugn, negative Analogous words: oppose, combat, *resist, fight: controvert, *disprove: *trespass, encroach, infringe Antonyms: uphold (law, principle): allege (right, claim, privilege) … New Dictionary of Synonyms
contravene — [v] go against, contradict abjure, breach, break, combat, conflict with, counteract, cross, defy, disaffirm, disobey, encroach, exclude, fight, gainsay, hinder, impugn, infract, infringe, interfere, interpose, intrude, negate, offend, oppose,… … New thesaurus
contravene — ► VERB 1) commit an act that is not in accordance with (a law, treaty, etc.). 2) conflict with (a right, principle, etc.). DERIVATIVES contravener noun contravention noun. ORIGIN Latin contravenire, from venire come … English terms dictionary
contravene — [kän΄trə vēn′] vt. contravened, contravening [Fr contrevenir < LL contravenire < L contra, against + venire, to COME] 1. to go against; oppose; conflict with; violate [practices contravening an ethical code] 2. to disagree with in argument; … English World dictionary
contravene — transitive verb ( vened; vening) Etymology: Middle French or Late Latin; Middle French contrevenir, from Late Latin contravenire, from Latin contra + venire to come more at come Date: 1567 1. to go or act contrary to ; violate … New Collegiate Dictionary
contravene — verb ADVERB ▪ blatantly, clearly, directly ▪ actions that blatantly contravene the rules of civilized warfare Contravene is used with these nouns as the object: ↑act, ↑article, ↑regulation … Collocations dictionary