To recall; to summon again, as persons., To recall, as a deed, will, law, or statute; to revoke; to rescind or abrogate by authority, as by act of the legislature; as, to repeal a law., To suppress; to repel., Recall, as from exile., Revocation; abrogation; as, the repeal of a statute; the repeal of a law or a usage.
I think your question is garbled. Two people can repell each other, meaning that they have a mutual dislike, but they cannot repeal each other. Only laws can be repealed, and two laws cannot repeal each other. You could also be talking about magnets. Two north poles, or two south poles repell each other, meaning that they push each other away.
who decided to sentd a petitoion to king george the third a petiton to repeal the acts
repeal
to take back, or to cancel a law
The king of England repealed the stamp act was because British merchants didn't get business they told the king to repeal it.
To recall on something and stop what is going on.
I think your question is garbled. Two people can repell each other, meaning that they have a mutual dislike, but they cannot repeal each other. Only laws can be repealed, and two laws cannot repeal each other. You could also be talking about magnets. Two north poles, or two south poles repell each other, meaning that they push each other away.
I have no choice but to repeal the promotion I gave you.
Repeal
having a voice in the legislature would have been repeal
In parliament they decided to repeal the old law.
to cancel
Repeal is the process whereby a law or amendment is reversed.
Loyalist Anti-Repeal Union was created in 1886.
To recall; to summon again, as persons., To recall, as a deed, will, law, or statute; to revoke; to rescind or abrogate by authority, as by act of the legislature; as, to repeal a law., To suppress; to repel., Recall, as from exile., Revocation; abrogation; as, the repeal of a statute; the repeal of a law or a usage.
to repeal is to take something away... like a legislation (law) or rule.
The eloquent speaker voted to repeal the bill.