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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
overturn
verb
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a boat capsizes/overturns (=turns over in the water)
▪ Will stood up suddenly and the boat capsized.
a boat overturns (=turns over in the water)
a court quashes/overturns sth (=says that an earlier decision was wrong)
▪ A Brazilian court has quashed a 19-year jail sentence.
overrule/overturn a decision (=officially change a decision by another person or group)
▪ A director of the company had overruled that decision.
overturn a majority (=win a majority that previously belonged to someone else)
▪ She hoped to overturn a Tory majority of 2,221.
overturn a verdict (=officially say that it was wrong)
▪ He was convicted of spying, but the verdict was later overturned.
quash/overturn a conviction (=officially say that it was wrong)
▪ The Court of Appeal quashed their convictions.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
appeal
▪ The appeal court, overturning this conviction, found him guilty only on what was described as the lesser charge of genocide.
▪ The Court of Appeal overturned his decision.
▪ An appeals court overturned the convictions in 1979.
▪ The Northern Ireland Court of Appeal overturned his conviction for wounding one of the teenagers, who later died.
▪ The decision of the Court of Appeal overturning that of Vinelott J. could be seen as appeal or review.
▪ A federal judge had dismissed the action, and the appeals court overturned that decision.
ban
▪ It has also launched a bid to overturn a ban on the use of vast factory whaling ships.
▪ President Clinton has said he will veto any attempt to overturn the ban.
▪ He is likely to overturn the Bush ban on abortion counselling and the military's outlawing of gays.
▪ Mr Justice Gage overturned a previous ban on any picture or artist's impression being published of George.
▪ The Fayre, at Hillersland near Coleford, took place after a last minute legal battle to overturn a music licence ban.
conviction
▪ The appeal court, overturning this conviction, found him guilty only on what was described as the lesser charge of genocide.
▪ An appeals court overturned the convictions in 1979.
▪ The Northern Ireland Court of Appeal overturned his conviction for wounding one of the teenagers, who later died.
▪ Growing pressure for democratic change On Oct. 3 the Appeal Court overturned the conviction and sentencing of two prominent political prisoners.
▪ Reza Eslaminia, 35, is taking his last shot at overturning his 1988 conviction.
▪ A judge this week is to rule on a defense request to reduce or overturn her second-degree murder conviction.
court
▪ The appeal court, overturning this conviction, found him guilty only on what was described as the lesser charge of genocide.
▪ Post of Boalt Hall said he believed a consensus existed that the court would not overturn Prop. 209.
▪ The Court of Appeal overturned his decision.
▪ An appeals court overturned the convictions in 1979.
▪ The High Court has overturned decisions made by secretaries of state.
▪ A federal judge had dismissed the action, and the appeals court overturned that decision.
▪ The Northern Ireland Court of Appeal overturned his conviction for wounding one of the teenagers, who later died.
▪ A Chicago-based federal appeals court overturned the decision.
decision
▪ Now, that decision has been overturned although the appeal judges spoke of strong mitigating factors in the case.
▪ This can result in a decision being overturned.
▪ Managers will meet advertising watchdogs today to try and get the decision overturned.
▪ This decision was overturned by the House of Lords but the reasoning of their Lordships is not uniform.
▪ Intel said the decision overturning the jury verdict in its favour will have little impact on the 80486 market.
law
▪ Her case ended up in the Supreme Court which overturned restrictive abortion laws in 46 states.
majority
▪ The hectic schedule ended in Cheltenham, where the Liberal democrats hope to overturn a Conservative majority of just under 5,000.
▪ It would be nearly impossible for them to overturn such a majority in one election.
▪ Bartlett's surprise victory overturned a large Tory majority.
▪ Gold aims to overturn a 7,637 majority in one of Britain's most middle-class seats.
▪ On the face of it Labour has a real chance of overturning the Tory majority of 2,661.
▪ In the Midlands, the Tories lost Nuneaton, where Labour overturned a majority of more than 5,500.
policy
▪ Government rules prevent the use of that money to build council houses but Coun Munsey wants Mr Major to overturn those policies.
verdict
▪ The couple appealed to a higher court in Guangzhou, which overturned that verdict in May.
▪ Intel said the decision overturning the jury verdict in its favour will have little impact on the 80486 market.
■ VERB
seek
▪ He filed a complaint with the House of Representatives seeking to overturn the election result.
try
▪ The House of Lords, the second chamber, will try to overturn the measure.
▪ Their victims stand as a constant reminder, both of their crimes, and of the reality they have tried to overturn.
vote
▪ The Labour councillors voted to overturn the officers' recommendation and give permission for the works to be demolished.
▪ A majority of those voting can overturn the actions of their own elected representatives.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ During the riots several cars were overturned and set on fire.
▪ Fans roamed the streets, overturning cars with foreign license plates.
▪ One of the boats had overturned.
▪ Protestors overturned cars and set fire to them.
▪ The execution ended a 14-year battle to have Bannister's death sentence overturned.
▪ The truck had overturned, but the driver was not injured.
▪ The whole crew was drowned when their boat overturned in a storm.
▪ The wind was so strong that it overturned dustbins and wrecked fences.
▪ Today's ruling overturns part of a lower court's decision on July 25.
▪ Wolf was found guilty of treason, but the conviction was overturned by Germany's highest court in 1995.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ A majority of those voting can overturn the actions of their own elected representatives.
▪ An appeals court overturned the convictions in 1979.
▪ Cruz's house arrest and dismissal were overturned by the Supreme Court on Dec. 29, but he remained suspended from office.
▪ Government rules prevent the use of that money to build council houses but Coun Munsey wants Mr Major to overturn those policies.
▪ In recent months, Milhoan has written lengthy rebuttals to senior Navy officials in hopes of overturning his dismissal.
▪ In short, for every argument there was a counter argument, or a later discovery overturned the accepted wisdom.
▪ Nurse jailed for hitting patient has conviction overturned.
▪ The House of Lords overturned the decision.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Overturn

Overturn \O"ver*turn`\, n. The act off overturning, or the state of being overturned or subverted; overthrow; as, an overturn of parties.

Overturn

Overturn \O`ver*turn"\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Overturned; p. pr. & vb. n. Overturning.]

  1. To turn or throw from a basis, foundation, or position; to overset; as, to overturn a carriage or a building.

  2. To subvert; to destroy; to overthrow.

  3. To overpower; to conquer.
    --Milton.

    Syn: To demolish; overthrow. See Demolish.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
overturn

early 13c., of a wheel, "to rotate, roll over," from over- + turn (v.). Attested from c.1300 in general transitive sense "to throw over violently;" figurative meaning "to ruin, destroy" is from late 14c. Of judicial decisions, "to reverse," it is attested from 1826. Related: Overturned; overturning.\n

Wiktionary
overturn

vb. 1 To turn over, capsize or upset (something) 2 To overthrow or destroy something 3 (context legal English) To reverse a decision; to overrule or rescind 4 To diminish the significance of a previous defeat by winning; to comeback from.

WordNet
overturn
  1. n. the act of upsetting something; "he was badly bruised by the upset of his sled at a high speed" [syn: upset, turnover]

  2. an improbable and unexpected victory; "the biggest upset since David beat Goliath" [syn: upset]

  3. v. turn from an upright or normal position; "The big vase overturned"; "The canoe tumped over" [syn: turn over, tip over, tump over]

  4. cause to overturn from an upright or normal position; "The cat knocked over the flower vase"; "the clumsy customer turned over the vase"; "he tumped over his beer" [syn: tip over, turn over, upset, knock over, bowl over, tump over]

  5. rule against; "The Republicans were overruled when the House voted on the bill" [syn: overrule, override, overthrow, reverse]

  6. cause the downfall of; of rulers; "The Czar was overthrown"; "subvert the ruling class" [syn: overthrow, subvert, bring down]

  7. annul by recalling or rescinding; "He revoked the ban on smoking"; "lift an embargo"; "vacate a death sentence" [syn: revoke, annul, lift, countermand, reverse, repeal, rescind, vacate]

  8. change radically; "E-mail revolutionized communication in academe" [syn: revolutionize, revolutionise]

Wikipedia
Overturn

Overturn is a video game developed by Studio Zan for WiiWare. It was released in Japan on December 2, 2008, in North America on August 3, 2009 and in Europe on February 12, 2010 by Gamebridge as Overturn: Mecha Wars.

Overturn (horse)

Overturn (foaled 22 April 2004) is an Irish-bred thoroughbred racehorse trained by Donald McCain, Jr.. He has amassed over £600,000 in prize money, and has won major races such as the 2011 Fighting Fifth Hurdle. He is the first ever horse to complete the double of winning Newcastle Racecourse's major flat race and major National Hunt race - the Northumberland Plate (Pitmen's Derby) and Fighting Fifth. He finished second behind Rock On Ruby in the 2012 Champion Hurdle.

Usage examples of "overturn".

The young man told him the various antipathy stories, about the evil-eye hypothesis, about his horse-taming exploits, his rescuing the student whose boat was overturned, and every occurrence he could recall which would help out the effect of his narrative.

In this manner did the crafty Fathom turn to account those ingratiating qualifications he inherited from nature, and maintain, with incredible assiduity and circumspection, an amorous correspondence with two domestic rivals, who watched the conduct of each other with the most indefatigable virulence of envious suspicion, until an accident happened, which had well-nigh overturned the bark of his policy, and induced him to alter the course, that he might not be shipwrecked on the rocks that began to multiply in the prosecution of his present voyage.

Be who he will that meddleth with this government to overturn it, it shall be as heavy to him as the burthensome stone to the enemies of the kirk.

Two detours though twisting alleyways led them to a vacant, overgrown area where Flax plumped himself down on an overturned discarded tub.

From the left, where they had been inching by the overturned corpse of a VW Microbus, came a squall of grinding metal.

In addition, Tom had an ingenious device to automatically adapt his monoplane to sudden currents of air that might overturn it, and this device was one of the points which he kept secret.

Ged who had never been down from the heights of the mountain, the Port of Gont was an awesome and marvellous place, the great houses and towers of cut stone and waterfront of piers and docks and basins and moorages, the seaport where half a hundred boats and galleys rocked at quayside or lay hauled up and overturned for repairs or stood out at anchor in the roadstead with furled sails and closed oarports, the sailors shouting in strange dialects and the longshoremen running heavyladen amongst barrels and boxes and coils of rope and stacks of oars, the bearded merchants in furred robes conversing quietly as they picked their way along the slimy stones above the water, the fishermen unloading their catch, coopers pounding and shipmakers hammering and clamsellers singing and shipmasters bellowing, and beyond all the silent, shining bay.

The demon overturned another table, spilling mouthless dolls across the floor.

Cloud took out his quizzing glass, blessing Charlie Parrett for treating it kindly, and surveyed the overturned furniture, the broken glassware, and, finally, the livid baronet.

Later he saw an overturned garbage can with a filigree of fish bones ornamenting the particoloured heap.

But all Parvis found was an overturned toolbox and wrenches that had spilled from it.

A glass crashed to the floor and a chair overturned as the vast bulk of the postmistress rose to confront him.

Marathe had once, as a child, with legs, bent himself over and overturned a decaying log in the forests of the Lac de Deux Montaignes region of his four-limbed childhood, before Le Culte du Prochain Train.

Deliberately, he blocked out the scrabbling and rustling from the overturned trash barrel, the shrill voice with its accusations against the luckless Quishan, and the ever-present rumble from the port .

Rudman also knew that Souter believed in the principle of not overturning Supreme Court precedents unless there was an overwhelming argument.