Recant in a sentence as a verb

If you want to recant or clarify parts of things you've said, you can do that too.

I suspect he'll recant the statement due to "youthful arrogance" at some point!

To hopefully convince a few to recant and acknowledge at least one flaw.

There are some people within Mozilla who are demanding he recant his Pro 8 support.

This has helped me a lot. I'll recant Think Smart again, where Dr. Restak recommends asking yourself these questions:"Am I going to allow this experience to determine the course of the rest of my life?

After reading the "Computer Science" entry I'm ready to recant and call Dawkins' essay flawless in comparison.

I will recant this statement when someone manages to apply it without turning into a dictatorial regime, but don't hold your breath for that.

I doubt he even had to go so far as to completely recant on it, so much as just express some understanding of how his donation can be seen to have hurt real people, many of whom he now worked with and had to lead.

The only section of that page that might be relevant to what you just said was " police and military personnel, groups with more reason to deny past illegal drug use, were twice as likely to recant than the general population.

And if they are, it is your duty and the duty of your peers to cease dealings with the violent aggressor and either economically deprive them of resources until they recant or defend yourselves appropriately as a last resort.> corruption in states than there is in marketsThe problem is that corruption is inefficient.

Recant definitions

verb

formally reject or disavow a formerly held belief, usually under pressure; "He retracted his earlier statements about his religion"; "She abjured her beliefs"

See also: abjure forswear retract resile