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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
disobey
verb
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
disobey/ignore an order
▪ Anyone who disobeys these orders will be severely punished.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
order
▪ I should have liked simply to disobey orders and stay in the trench.
▪ He tells them how he was punished for disobeying orders.
▪ A pardon need not imply that a soldier did not desert, or show cowardice, or disobey orders.
▪ No matter what your instructions are, it is difficult to disobey a direct order from the President of the United States.
▪ A soldier who feared flying was fined £600 yesterday for endangering a civil aircraft and disobeying the captain's orders.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Black had disobeyed the judge's ruling, and continued to harass his ex-wife.
▪ It was unfair of the teacher to make us stay after school, but no one dared disobey.
▪ My father was very strict and old-fashioned, but I never disobeyed him.
▪ Pilots who disobey orders to land can face up to five years in prison.
▪ Protestors disobeyed the law and blocked the city's main roads.
▪ Troops openly disobeyed orders, refusing to use force against their own people.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ A pardon need not imply that a soldier did not desert, or show cowardice, or disobey orders.
▪ Christians, he insisted, had to disobey any who went against the law of reason or the codes of religion.
▪ Conversely, you may be entitled to disobey an instruction which management ostensibly has the power to give.
▪ He tells them how he was punished for disobeying orders.
▪ I should have liked simply to disobey orders and stay in the trench.
▪ It made her glad she was disobeying them; gladder still that she and Rob were lovers.
▪ No matter what your instructions are, it is difficult to disobey a direct order from the President of the United States.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Disobey

Disobey \Dis`o*bey"\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Disobeyed; p. pr. & vb. n. Disobeying.] [F. d['e]sob['e]ir; pref. d['e]s- (L. dis-) + ob['e]ir. See Obey, and cf. Disobedient.] Not to obey; to neglect or refuse to obey (a superior or his commands, the laws, etc.); to transgress the commands of (one in authority); to violate, as an order; as, refractory children disobey their parents; men disobey their Maker and the laws.

Not to disobey her lord's behest.
--Tennyson.

Disobey

Disobey \Dis`o*bey"\, v. i. To refuse or neglect to obey; to violate commands; to be disobedient.

He durst not know how to disobey.
--Sir P. Sidney.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
disobey

late 14c., from Old French desobeir (13c.) "disobey; refuse service or homage," from Vulgar Latin *disoboedire, reformed with dis- from Late Latin inobedire, a back-formation from inobediens "not obeying," from Latin in- "not" + present participle of obedire (see obey). Related: Disobeyed; disobeying.

Wiktionary
disobey

vb. 1 (context transitive English) To refuse or (intentionally) fail to obey an order of (somebody). 2 (context intransitive English) To refuse or (intentionally) fail to obey.

WordNet
disobey

v. refuse to go along with; refuse to follow; be disobedient; "He disobeyed his superviser and was fired" [ant: obey]

Usage examples of "disobey".

It is, after all, a tremendous pity that I did not disobey Akeley and play the record for others - a tremendous pity, too, that all of his letters were lost.

Eleanor said firmly, and she did know for she had been in Caen when the English archers, disobeying their King, had swarmed across the bridge and laid the town waste.

The last Tyli saw of the Boss Canvasman, he was leaping through the air to tackle the roughneck who had disobeyed his orders.

Diefenbaker thus placed Menzies in the position of either having to disobey a prime ministerial directive or having to violate the sanctity of his civil service status.

Victorian immune system, and of these, most were immunocules whose job was to drift around the dirty littoral of New Chusan using lidar to home in on any other mites that might disobey protocol.

If I seem to disobey that command now, it is only because I think that at this stage a warning about those farther Vermont hills--and about those Himalayan peaks which bold explorers are more and more determined to ascend--is more conducive to public safety than silence would be.

He had been half expecting a reprimand for disobeying the order to charge the railbed, and his tone suggested the scorn in which he now held Starbuck for not daring to impose discipline.

Development Communication Ship Flash disobeyed order to end transmission as per Schedule Three rpt Three.

The two sages had chopped down several small shrubs and dug out the remainder of their roots, pulled the coarse grass up by the roots, working with the haste of those who dared not even think of disobeying any order.

The children picked up the tension immediately and multiplied it severalfold, spilling everything liquid that was within reach, fighting with each other, crying, and disobeying all instructions, while Kassler and Vita attempted to handle each crisis without talking directly to each other.

He continued firing at the distant Jaina Solo and now sideslipped to starboard, distancing himself from Charat Kraal, indicating in no uncertain terms his intent to continue following his own warrior spirit, even if it meant disobeying direct orders.

Monk, disobeying, was knocked rubber-kneed with a slender stick of stovewood from the fuel rack beside the fireplace.

At this very last moment before removing the caskets he had received an honorable reprieve-a clear order he could not disobey.

Negoro, the Arab dealers and their havildars all helped to swell the numbers, the queen having given express orders that no one who had been at the lakoni should leave the town, and it was not deemed prudent to disobey her commands.

She would in nothing disobey her husband, but if Mr Lopez were to stand for Silverbridge, it could not but be known in the borough that Mr Lopez was her friend.