Abdicant
abdicating, forsaking, or deserting:
to be abdicant of one’s duty.
a person who abdicates; abdicator.
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- Abdicate
to renounce or relinquish a throne, right, power, claim, responsibility, or the like, especially in a formal manner: The aging founder of the firm decided to abdicate. to give up or renounce (authority, duties, an office, etc.), especially in a voluntary, public, or formal manner: King Edward VIII of England abdicated the throne in 1936. […]
- Abdication
the act or state of ; renunciation. Contemporary Examples abdication brought her to the throne, but it will not be the way she leaves it. To the Queen, on Her 83rd Birthday Robert Lacey April 20, 2009 Bergoglio is 76 years old—nine years younger than Benedict at the time of his abdication. Introducing Pope Francis, […]
- Abdicative
to renounce or relinquish a throne, right, power, claim, responsibility, or the like, especially in a formal manner: The aging founder of the firm decided to abdicate. to give up or renounce (authority, duties, an office, etc.), especially in a voluntary, public, or formal manner: King Edward VIII of England abdicated the throne in 1936. […]
- Abdicator
to renounce or relinquish a throne, right, power, claim, responsibility, or the like, especially in a formal manner: The aging founder of the firm decided to abdicate. to give up or renounce (authority, duties, an office, etc.), especially in a voluntary, public, or formal manner: King Edward VIII of England abdicated the throne in 1936. […]
- Abdiel
abdiel servant of God, (1 Chr. 5:15), a Gadite chief. Historical Examples One way and another, Clare and abdiel did not die of hunger or of cold. A Rough Shaking George MacDonald Amongst politicians he was a faithful abdiel, when all others had deserted the cause. Hours in a Library Leslie Stephen abdiel was not […]