Many English verbs begin with the prefix re-, meaning “again” or “backward,” so we wouldn’t criticize you for drawing a connection between rebuff and buff, a verb meaning “to polish or shine.” But rebuff would beg to differ: this word comes to us from the Middle French verb rebuffer, which traces back to the Old Italian ribuffare, meaning “to reprimand.” (Buff, in contrast, comes from the Middle French noun buffle, meaning “wild ox”). A similar word, rebuke, shares the “criticize” sense of rebuff, but not the “reject” sense; one can rebuke another’s actions or policies, but one does not rebuke the advances of another, for example. Like rebuke, rebuff can also be used as a noun, as in “The proposal was met with a stern rebuff from the Board of Trustees.”
Examples of rebuff in a Sentence
Our suggestion was immediately rebuffed.
The company rebuffed the bid.
She rebuffed him when he asked her for a date.
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Donovan rebuffed Brennan, and the two pledged to work together.—
Bob Goldsborough,
Chicago Tribune,
26 June 2026 Several teams over the years have made overtures for Kessler in potential trade talks, talks the Jazz had rebuffed.—
Tony Jones,
New York Times,
1 July 2026 Pattis tried to get out of representing his Diamantis in the second trial but was rebuffed by the court.—
Kevin Rennie,
Hartford Courant,
27 June 2026 Trump is consistently being rebuffed in court; the Justice Department has lost at least a dozen election lawsuits.—
Toluse Olorunnipa,
The Atlantic,
4 July 2026 See All Example Sentences for rebuff
Word History
Etymology
Middle French rebuffer, from Old Italian ribuffare to reprimand, from ribuffo reprimand