secede
21secede — v. n. Withdraw, retire, draw off …
22secede — verb (I) formal to formally leave an organization, especially because there has been a disagreement about its aims etc (+ from): By 1861, 11 states had seceded from the Union. secession noun (singular, uncountable) …
23secede — verb the southern states seceded from the Union, precipitating the Civil War Syn: withdraw from, break away from, break with, separate (oneself) from, leave, split with, split off from, disaffiliate from, resign from, pull out of; informal quit… …
24secede — v 1. sever or separate oneself, withdraw, break away from, break with, abandon, forsake; pull out of, drop out of, wash one s hands of, have nothing further to do with, turn one s back on, have no truck with; defect, apostatize, bolt, (of… …
25secede — se·cede …
26secede — se•cede [[t]sɪˈsid[/t]] v. i. ced•ed, ced•ing to withdraw formally from an alliance, federation, or association • Etymology: 1695–1705; < L sēcēdere to withdraw. See se , cede se•ced′er, n …
27secede — /səˈsid / (say suh seed) verb (i) (seceded, seceding) to withdraw formally from an alliance or association, as from a political or religious organisation. {Latin sēcēdere go back, withdraw} –seceder, noun …
28SECEDE — (Sâcid. C.) Secde edenler …
29secede — v.intr. (usu. foll. by from) withdraw formally from membership of a political federation or a religious body. Derivatives: seceder n. Etymology: L secedere secess (as SE , cedere go) …
30secede from the Union — ➡ Civil War * * * …