Dismissed vs Relive - What's the difference?
dismissed | relive |
(dismiss)
(senseid)(lb) To discharge; to end the employment or service of.
:
(lb) To order to leave.
:
(lb) To dispel; to rid one's mind of.
:
(lb) To reject; to refuse to accept.
:
*
*:"He was here," observed Drina composedly, "and father was angry with him." ¶ "What?" exclaimed Eileen. "When?" ¶ "This morning, before father went downtown." ¶ Both Selwyn and Lansing cut in coolly, dismissing the matter with a careless word or two; and coffee was served—cambric tea in Drina's case.
To get a batsman out.
:
To give someone a red card; to send off.
*{{quote-news, year=2010, date=December 28, author=Kevin Darlin, work=BBC
, title= (obsolete) To bring back to life; to revive, resuscitate.
*1590 , (Edmund Spenser), The Faerie Queene , III.4:
*:Had she not beene devoide of mortall slime, / Shee should not then have bene relyv'd againe [...].
To come back to life.
To experience (something) again; to live over again.
:I relive that horrible accident every night and wake screaming, just as I screamed when it happened.
As verbs the difference between dismissed and relive
is that dismissed is (dismiss) while relive is (obsolete|transitive) to bring back to life; to revive, resuscitate.dismissed
English
Verb
(head)dismiss
English
Verb
West Brom 1-3 Blackburn, passage=Kalinic later saw red for a rash tackle on Paul Scharner before Gabriel Tamas was dismissed for bringing down Diouf.}}