Waive vs Exclude - What's the difference?
waive | exclude |
(obsolete) To outlaw (someone).
(obsolete) To abandon, give up (someone or something).
*
(legal) To relinquish (a right etc.); to give up claim to; to forego.
*
To put aside, avoid.
*
(obsolete) To move from side to side; to sway.
(obsolete) To stray, wander.
* c. 1390 , (Geoffrey Chaucer), "The Merchant's Tale", Canterbury Tales :
(obsolete, legal) A woman put out of the protection of the law; an outlawed woman.
(obsolete) A waif; a castaway.
* 1624 , (John Donne), Devotions upon Emergent Occasions :
To bar (someone) from entering; to keep out.
To expel; to put out.
(legal, of evidence) To refuse to accept as valid.
(medicine) To eliminate from diagnostic consideration.
As verbs the difference between waive and exclude
is that waive is (obsolete) to outlaw (someone) or waive can be (obsolete) to move from side to side; to sway while exclude is to bar (someone) from entering; to keep out.As a noun waive
is (obsolete|legal) a woman put out of the protection of the law; an outlawed woman or waive can be .waive
English
Etymology 1
(etyl) weyven, from (etyl) .Verb
(waiv)- If you waive the right to be silent, anything you say can be used against you in a court of law.
Derived terms
* waivableEtymology 2
(etyl) weyven, from (etyl) .Verb
(waiv)- ye been so ful of sapience / That yow ne liketh, for youre heighe prudence, / To weyven fro the word of Salomon.
Etymology 3
From (etyl) waive, probably as the past participle of (weyver), as Etymology 1, above.Noun
(en noun)- (John Donne)
Etymology 4
Variant forms.Noun
(en noun)- I know, O Lord, the ordinary discomfort that accompanies that phrase, that the house is visited, and that thy works, and thy tokens are upon the patient; but what a wretched, and disconsolate hermitage is that house, which is not visited by thee, and what a waive and stray is that man, that hath not thy marks upon him?
exclude
English
Verb
(exclud)- to exclude young animals from the womb or from eggs
