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Definition of ignore verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

ignore

verb
 
/ɪɡˈnɔː(r)/
 
/ɪɡˈnɔːr/
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they ignore
 
/ɪɡˈnɔː(r)/
 
/ɪɡˈnɔːr/
he / she / it ignores
 
/ɪɡˈnɔːz/
 
/ɪɡˈnɔːrz/
past simple ignored
 
/ɪɡˈnɔːd/
 
/ɪɡˈnɔːrd/
past participle ignored
 
/ɪɡˈnɔːd/
 
/ɪɡˈnɔːrd/
-ing form ignoring
 
/ɪɡˈnɔːrɪŋ/
 
/ɪɡˈnɔːrɪŋ/
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  1. ignore something to pay no attention to something synonym disregard
    • He ignored the 30 mph speed limit sign and accelerated down the road.
    • I made a suggestion but they chose to ignore it.
    • We cannot afford to ignore their advice.
    • to ignore a warning/a problem/an issue
    • She deliberately ignored my question and changed the subject.
    • We can't ignore the fact that there is a huge problem here.
    • His work was largely ignored and forgotten for 30 years.
    • Much of social science research simply ignores these sectors.
    • The government has completely ignored the wishes of the public.
    Extra Examples
    • He blithely ignored her protests and went on talking.
    • Her mother's opinions on how babies should be cared for were freely given and duly ignored.
    • Hill wilfully ignored the conventions of the banking world.
    • I've learned to ignore all of my sister's hurtful comments.
    • People seem very willing to ignore the risks.
    • Safety guidelines had been blatantly ignored.
    • Scientists have tended to ignore these creatures.
    • Social services routinely ignore the problems facing at-risk young women.
    • The diesel fumes from Oxford's buses are not easily ignored.
    • The managers have conveniently ignored these statistics.
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb
    • altogether
    • completely
    • entirely
    verb + ignore
    • cannot
    • cannot afford to
    • be difficult to
    phrases
    • be widely ignored
    • ignore something at your peril
    • ignore the fact that…
    See full entry
  2. ignore somebody to pretend that you have not seen somebody or that somebody is not there
    • She ignored him and carried on with her work.
    • If he tries to start an argument, just ignore him.
    opposite acknowledge (4)
    Extra Examples
    • He continued eating, deciding to ignore her.
    • I shrugged, pretending to ignore him.
    • She sat at her desk and studiously ignored me.
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb
    • altogether
    • completely
    • entirely
    verb + ignore
    • cannot
    • cannot afford to
    • be difficult to
    phrases
    • be widely ignored
    • ignore something at your peril
    • ignore the fact that…
    See full entry
  3. Word Originlate 15th cent. (in the sense ‘be ignorant of’): from French ignorer or Latin ignorare ‘not know, ignore’, from in- ‘not’ + gno-, a base meaning ‘know’. Current senses date from the early 19th cent.
See ignore in the Oxford Advanced American DictionarySee ignore in the Oxford Learner's Dictionary of Academic English
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