cancel

/ˈkænsl/ (bre, ipa) · /ˈkænsl/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈkan(t)-səl/ (ame, mw)

cancel — verb

1. to decide that a planned activity, meeting, or gathering should not go ahead; or

1.動詞及物 / 不及物B1
釋義

to decide that a planned activity, meeting, or gathering should not go ahead; or to tell a business you wish to stop receiving a service or a product you previously asked for.

例句

The outdoor concert was cancelled because of the thunderstorm.

passive: was cancelled + reason clause

Leila cancelled her flight to Tokyo and asked for a refund.

cancel + direct object (booking/flight)

同義詞
  • call off

    phrasal verb, same meaning, slightly more informal

  • scrap

    more emphatic, often used for plans or projects

  • postpone

    means reschedule to a later date, not cancel entirely — a common confusion

反義詞

文法句型

cancel + noun phrase (event, order, appointment)

cancel + (no object)

用法筆記

Commonly used in both transitive (cancel + something) and intransitive (just 'cancel') patterns. The passive form — 'something is cancelled' — is very frequent in announcements.

常見錯誤

I cancelled the meeting to happen next week.
I cancelled the meeting.
💡'cancel' already means the event will not happen; you do not need to add 'to happen'.
She cancelled off the appointment.
She cancelled the appointment.
💡do not add 'off' after 'cancel'.

2. to stop producing or broadcasting a television programme, usually because of low

2.動詞及物B2
釋義

to stop producing or broadcasting a television programme, usually because of low viewer numbers or budget problems.

例句

The network cancelled the drama after only six episodes.

cancel + TV show + time reference

Fans started an online petition when their favourite series was cancelled.

passive: series was cancelled

同義詞
  • axe

    informal British term for cancelling a show or project

  • discontinue

    more formal, broader use beyond television

反義詞
  • renew

    to order more episodes of a TV show

文法句型

cancel + noun phrase (TV show, series, programme)

用法筆記

Subject is usually a TV network, streaming platform, or production company. The passive ('the show was cancelled') is very common in entertainment news.

3. to officially remove the legal or official force of a document, agreement, or ri

3.動詞及物C1
釋義

to officially remove the legal or official force of a document, agreement, or right, so that it is no longer valid.

例句

The court cancelled the contract because one party had broken the terms.

legal context: court cancels a contract

Tomás had to cancel his passport after it was stolen during the trip.

cancel + official document (passport)

同義詞
  • annul

    formal, specifically legal — often used for marriages or contracts

  • revoke

    formal, used for licences, permits, or rights

  • nullify

    formal, to make something have no legal effect

反義詞
  • validate

    to confirm that something is legally effective

文法句型

cancel + noun phrase (document, contract, agreement)

用法筆記

Used in formal, legal, or administrative contexts. The object is typically a legal instrument such as a contract, licence, passport, debt, or marriage. Do not confuse with sense 1 (cancelling a planned event) — this sense removes formal validity rather than stopping an activity.

4. to print or press an official mark onto a postage stamp or ticket, proving it wa

4.動詞及物B2
釋義

to print or press an official mark onto a postage stamp or ticket, proving it was already used and preventing it from being spent on postage a second time.

例句

The postal worker cancelled the stamp with a special machine.

agent + cancel stamp + instrument

Collectors often prefer stamps that have not been cancelled.

cancelled (participial adjective) — stamp condition

同義詞
  • frank

    to mark mail with an official stamp or signature showing postage is paid, slightly different process

文法句型

cancel + noun phrase (stamp, ticket, postage)

用法筆記

This is a specialist sense used in postal services and stamp collecting. The object is nearly always a stamp or ticket. An uncancelled stamp has not been marked and can still be used for postage or is more valuable to collectors.

5. to remove or cross out a piece of text, a command, or a selection so that it is

5.動詞及物B2
釋義

to remove or cross out a piece of text, a command, or a selection so that it is deleted or no longer appears.

例句

You can cancel the selected text by pressing the Delete key.

cancel + text + keyboard action

Yusuf cancelled the last sentence and rewrote it more clearly.

cancel + sentence in editing context

同義詞
  • delete

    more common in computing for permanently removing data

  • cross out

    used for marking text on paper with a line through it

  • strike through

    formal editing term for drawing a line through text

反義詞
  • keep

    to retain text or content

文法句型

cancel + noun phrase (text, word, command, selection)

用法筆記

In computing, 'cancel' is often used interchangeably with 'delete' but usually refers to cancelling a command or action rather than permanently erasing data. The noun 'cancel' in this context is rare; use 'cancellation' instead.

6. to stop supporting or following a famous person, company, or brand as a form of

6.動詞及物B2
釋義

to stop supporting or following a famous person, company, or brand as a form of public protest, usually after those people or groups made statements or took actions that others consider offensive.

例句

Fans threatened to cancel the singer after his offensive remarks went viral.

cancel + public figure + reason clause

Some people say cancel culture makes it hard for anyone to learn from their mistakes.

collocation: cancel culture

同義詞
  • boycott

    to refuse to buy or use something as a protest, more about products/services

  • call out

    to publicly criticise someone, not necessarily to stop supporting them entirely

反義詞
  • support

    to continue backing a person or brand

文法句型

cancel + noun phrase (person, celebrity, public figure)

用法筆記

This modern sense emerged from social-media activism. It often appears in the phrases 'cancel culture' and 'cancelled' (as a past-participle adjective, e.g. 'an actor who has been cancelled'). Use is informal and controversial; the term carries strong opinions on either side.

常見錯誤

They cancelled on the celebrity.
They cancelled the celebrity.
💡'cancel on someone' means to break a social plan (sense 1), not to socially reject them (sense 6).

cancel — noun