countercommand

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

counter- +‎ command

Noun[edit]

countercommand (plural countercommands)

  1. A command that cancels or reverses a previous command; a countermand.
    • 1933, Collier's Illustrated Weekly, volume 91, page 16:
      Someone else had given a countercommand — the Spanish soldiers were in riotous retreat! Don Carlos was engulfed by the screaming swirl of the Moorish horsemen.

Verb[edit]

countercommand (third-person singular simple present countercommands, present participle countercommanding, simple past and past participle countercommanded)

  1. (transitive) To countermand (a previous command).
  2. (transitive) To countermand (a person or group).