The Collaborative International Dictionary
Renunciatory \Re*nun"ci*a*to*ry\ (r?-n?n"sh?-?-t?-r?), a. [Cf. LL. renuntiatorius.] Pertaining to renunciation; containing or declaring a renunciation; as, renunciatory vows.
Wiktionary
a. Serving to renounce; rebellious, contrary.
Usage examples of "renunciatory".
Beau the renunciatory mystagogue, who whatever he was up to would not be occupied as Pierce was.
At the same time were signed the special conditions relating to each important article of the treaty, and the renunciatory clauses in which the kings abandoned their rights over the territory they had yielded to one another.
It was a simple, tender caress, expressive and renunciatory and it must have touched her for she shuddered and then, twisting round violently she threw her arms around his neck and crushed her cheek to his, holding him awkwardly and convulsively, less like a woman demanding a lover than a child frightened of the dark.
The outcome of his thought, ceasing to be renunciatory, flowers in images.
The outcome of his thought , ceasing to be renunciatory, flowers in images.