| 释义 | 
		de·ni·al I. \-ˈnī(ə)l\ noun (-s) Etymology: deny + -al 1.  : refusal to grant, assent to, or sanction : rejection of something requested, claimed, or felt to be due  < denial of his visiting privileges >  < denial of passports to undesirables > 2.   a.  : refusal to admit the truth of a statement, charge, or imputation : assertion that something alleged is untrue   < his denial that he took the money >   < her denial that her son was involved >  b.  : refusal to accept or acknowledge the reality or validity of a thing or idea   < his denial of the divine right of kings > 3.  : refusal to acknowledge a person or thing as standing in a certain relationship or as having a certain character : disavowal, repudiation  < a renegade's denial of his leader >  < the baron's denial of his weakling son > 4.  : the opposing by the defendant of an allegation of the opposite party in a law suit 5. dialect England  : hindrance, handicap, disadvantage  < his lame hand was a great denial to him > 6.  : a restriction or limitation upon one's own activity or desires : self-denial  < the three thousand which he had hoarded at the price of sacrifice and denial — William Faulkner > 7.  : a bridge bid indicating inability to raise or support a partner's bid 8. logic  : negation II. noun  : a psychological defense mechanism in which confrontation with a personal problem or with reality is avoided by denying the existence of the problem or reality |