Abjure

/əbˈdʒʊr/verb
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to formally reject or renounce; to give up under oath

Abjure means to formally reject or renounce, especially under oath. It is often used in legal, political, or religious contexts where someone publicly gives up a belief, claim, or allegiance.

Unlike casually changing your mind, abjure carries a sense of solemnity and permanence — it's a deliberate, sworn rejection.

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Abjure - meaning and memory mnemonic

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Memory Mnemonic

Keyword:

A JURY

The keyword A JURY comes from how Abjure sounds when spoken aloud. This pronunciation connection makes it easy to recall the keyword whenever you hear or see the word.

Memory Link

In court, a jury makes a man raise his hand, swear an oath, and give up his old belief forever.

Notice how the memory link places you in a courtroom — the setting naturally connects A JURY with the act of swearing an oath and giving up a belief. Both the keyword and the meaning are woven into one vivid scene. Visualise the man standing before the jury, raising his hand, and solemnly renouncing his old beliefs forever.

Abjure-Mnemonic

HOW TO MEMORIZE VOCABULARY

There are 3 steps to effectively memorising vocabulary.

Step 1: Derive a keyword from the word based on how the word is spelled or pronounced. Next time you see the word, you will be able to derive the keyword from it because it is based on the word.

Step 2: Form a visual memory link that connects the keyword and the meaning(s) of the word you are learning.

Step 3: Ensure to Visualise the image, see it in your imagination. This is important even if it takes a few seconds.

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Usage Examples

  • The politician was forced to abjure his earlier statements
  • After the scandal he abjured all connections to the organization
  • The new citizen was required to abjure allegiance to all foreign governments.
  • Under pressure from the church, he abjured his controversial beliefs.
  • She abjured all involvement with the group after learning of their true intentions.

Etymology of Abjure

From Latin abjurare, meaning "to deny on oath," from ab- (away) + jurare (to swear). The word entered English through Old French and has retained its original sense of formally swearing something off.


Synonyms & Antonyms of Abjure

Synonyms

renouncerecantretractdisavowforsakerepudiatereject

Antonyms

embraceaffirmupholdadoptendorse

Common Collocations with Abjure

abjure allegianceabjure a beliefabjure violenceabjure one's faithabjure a claimabjure under oathforced to abjurepublicly abjured

You've Learned It. Now Make Sure You Never Forget It.

The mnemonic visualisation above helps you learn this word instantly — no rote memorisation needed. But to move it into long-term memory, you still need to review it a few times.

This is where spaced repetition comes in — it shows you words right before you're about to forget them, so you spend less time reviewing and remember more. After just a few spaced reviews, you'll start recalling the meaning naturally — without even needing the keyword or memory link.

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Built In Spaced Repetition

You've learned this word using our mnemonic system — but to truly lock it into long-term memory, you need to review it at the right time. That's where spaced repetition comes in.

Our built-in spaced repetition system shows you words just before you're about to forget them, so you review less and remember more. After a few reviews, you'll recall the meaning naturally — without even needing the keyword or memory link.

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Visualisation Help

Visualising the memory link is the most important step — it's what makes you remember the word on the very first try. Don't just read the memory link. Close your eyes and see it play out in your imagination.

The more vivid and detailed your mental image, the stronger the memory. Every word on VocabularyFast comes with a visualisation audio guide. Just look at the image, hit play, and follow the audio as it walks you through the scene.

This takes only a few seconds but makes all the difference between forgetting a word tomorrow and remembering it for life.

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Test Yourself With Quizzes

Quizzes are the fastest way to check if you've truly learned a word. Pick from two modes — see the word and recall the meaning, or see the meaning and recall the word.

Both directions strengthen your memory in different ways. Each quiz is 10 questions, so it only takes a minute or two. Take a quiz anytime to quickly spot which words need more review.

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Words in each pack are organized into smaller, meaningful groups — not random lists. Each group contains words that share a theme, difficulty level, or frequency of appearance.

This lets you focus your learning on the words that matter most, rather than jumping between unrelated words. Start with the most commonly tested words and work your way through each group at your own pace.

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