Disabuse in a sentence as a verb

As the creator of the citation needed tag, I feel the urge to disabuse you of your usage of the phrase.

Let me disabuse you of that notion: Stephen is more aware of what is going on the wider world than anyone else I know or have ever met. Like him or hate him, he's a true polymath.

If nothing else, Plato should disabuse anyone of the notion that what's obvious to them isn't really that solid.

Which makes me think I might enjoy living in JapanTokyo will disabuse you of this notion fairly rapidly.

His blog is very much worth following, if only to disabuse yourself of the notion that GCC is infallible.

One easy way to disabuse yourself of this notion is to take a job working remote for a Canadian company.

And reading Mensa newsgroups will disabuse you very quickly of the idea IQ alone is even a positive, rather than neutral at best, trait.

I think we need to disabuse ourselves of the ideas of "western liberal democracies" or "rule of law" protecting our liberties.

Then, if they find contradictory information, they are free to share it, so that I might possibly disabuse myself of my prior misconceptions.

Am I right in thinking that the more you charge for a service, the higher the cost of support for that customer will beThis is one of those "That certainly feels like it could be true" intuitions which data will disabuse you of in a hurry if you run a SaaS business.

This is unfortunately typical of the Rails community's attitude toward these matters; you may safely assume that, were there anything remotely resembling sufficient documentation available, I would not feel the need to utter complaints such as those above -- if I have anywhere given the erroneous impression that I enjoy hacking my way through this horrible triple-canopy jungle, without so much as a sketch map, please allow me at this juncture to disabuse you of the notion!

Disabuse definitions

verb

free somebody (from an erroneous belief)