Noun
of Disown
Source: Webster's dictionaryThis in short is the case of the progressives who talk about freedom of thought. For them freedom of thought is synonymous to freedom of disowning one's God. This is, however, not freedom of thought but freedom of atheism. Muhammad Qutb
An integral approach even makes room for those who did the disowning to you. Ken Wilber
I feel that no one should be ashamed or have fear or doubt within themselves when they speak about the roots or Africa wherein I and I originate from. It's like an individual who tries to disown himself, and to me, it is a form of defeat by disowning yourself. Burning Spear
And if you say that's because you lot barged into her home like a herd of mentally deficient sheep, I'm disowning all three of you. Julia Quinn
Chrimes, Henry VII pp. 29–30 The French government, recalling Richard's effective disowning of the Treaty of Picquigny and refusal to accept the accompanying French pension, would not have welcomed the accession of one known to be unfriendly to France. Source: Internet
You can even say that Britain ended up disowning the Balfour Declaration, going so far as to abstain during the Nov. 29, 1947 United Nations vote—on the 30th anniversary of the declaration—that legitimized the creation of a sovereign Jewish state. Source: Internet