Dismiss in a sentence as a verb

Attorneys for both sides had their chance to dismiss the guy and they did not.

In any other context I would dismiss this comment as a troll, but yeah..

As a result, that claim wound up being finally dismissed for purposes of this lawsuit.

A recent motion to dismiss that case based on double jeopardy was denied.

I wonder if analysts have learned yet not to dismiss apparently crazy moves by Jeff Bezos.

And there is no easy way to dismiss the dialog without making a decision, no X in a corner, clicking the background does nothing.

It'll be a lot harder to dismiss examples of shitty patents if their shittiness is endorsed by the legal expertise of the EFF.

Is it not at least a source of ideas for things to investigate further?The problem with the middlebrow dismissal is that it's a magnet for upvotes.

Things have now gotten to the stage where I flinch slightly as I click on the "comments" link, bracing myself for the dismissive comment I know will be waiting for me at the top of the page.

It's very unfair of you to post a long comment on an article you didn't bother to read, let alone dismiss it with a slur about "revisionist history", whatever that is.

It's tempting to dismiss this as just e-lebrity gossip, but I think that this kind of rottenness is probably more dangerous to the Valley than threats from Washington or talk of bubbles.

You absentmindedly dismiss these 95th percentile professionals in the "junior, shady or clueless" category.

Or is there some amount of crossover between inventing the future and merely playing around?Instead the top comment is the forum analogue of a fluff post: a cynical dismissal based on some presumed bad intention on the writer's part.

" I posit that it's better than not bonding at all, but if you really want to dismiss my friendships and suggest the only way to forge lifetime male bonding is to form an underground anarchist militia and make bombs out of soap, I'll take that under consideration.

Dismiss definitions

verb

bar from attention or consideration; "She dismissed his advances"

See also: disregard discount ignore

verb

cease to consider; put out of judicial consideration; "This case is dismissed!"

verb

stop associating with; "They dropped her after she had a child out of wedlock"

See also: drop

verb

terminate the employment of; discharge from an office or position; "The boss fired his secretary today"; "The company terminated 25% of its workers"

verb

end one's encounter with somebody by causing or permitting the person to leave; "I was dismissed after I gave my report"

verb

declare void; "The President dissolved the parliament and called for new elections"

See also: dissolve