vote
/voʊt/
verb
- To express a choice or opinion by casting a ballot or raising a hand, etc.
- She always votes for the candidate who cares about education.
- I plan to vote in the upcoming presidential election.
- The members voted to approve the budget for next year.
- To decide or suggest something by general agreement.
- The team voted to postpone the meeting until Friday.
- The class voted to have a pizza party for the end of the term.
- We voted that the movie was the best we had seen all year.
Antonyms
noun
- A formal expression of choice or opinion, especially in an election or decision-making process.
- The committee took a vote on whether to approve the new policy.
- Every citizen has the right to cast a vote in the national election.
- Her vote was the deciding factor in the close race.
- The total number of votes cast in an election or decision.
- The vote was overwhelmingly in favor of the new law.
- The opposition gained a significant share of the vote.
- The student council election had a record vote this year.
- The right to participate in an election; suffrage.
- He exercised his vote for the first time in the local election.
- In many countries, the vote is granted to all citizens over 18.
- Women fought for decades to win the vote.