repulse

The act of repulsing or the state of being repulsed.

Noun

  1. The act of repulsing or the state of being repulsed.
  2. Refusal, rejection or repulsion.

Origin

Borrowed from Latin repulsus, from repellere (“to drive back”), from re- (“back”) + pellere (“to drive”). For spelling, as in pulse, the -e (on -lse) is so the end is pronounced /ls/, rather than /lz/ as in pulls, and does not change the vowel (‘u’). Compare else, false, convulse.

Forms

repulses

Related

repel repellent repulsion repulsive pulse

Verb

  1. To repel or drive back.
    • to repulse an assault; to repulse the enemy
    • If we fail to repulse the enemy within the gates--unemployment, poverty, disorganized agriculture and the like--from whence may we expect the united strength and clear purpose to repulse any outside force? - 1939...
  2. To reject or rebuff.
    • to repulse a suitor
    • At the end of a week, she could bear the suspense no longer, and so went humbly to her old home and sought forgiveness. She was not repulsed, but her reception was cold; and this hurt her almost as badly. - 1850, T. S....
  3. To cause revulsion in; to repel.
    • The smell of rotting food repulsed me.
    • I find your conduct reprehensible, disgusting, and it repulses me, the way a mongoose repulses a snake.

Forms

repulses repulsing repulsed

Derived

chemorepulse repulser repulsor repulsor beam