uninfluence

English

Etymology 1

From un- +‎ influence.

Noun

uninfluence (uncountable)

  1. The lack or absence of influence.
    • 1922, Japanese Journal of Physics, volumes 1-3, page 11:
      This result justifies the negative result of the well-known Lodge's experiment to detect ether drag by rapidly rotating a heavy iron spheroid, and also predicts the uninfluence of the rotation of the earth, the sun and the Jupiter on the velocity of the ray of light passing by their edges.
    • 2013, G. Rizzi, ‎M.L. Ruggiero, Relativity in Rotating Frames, page 156:
      Such experiment was devoted to reveal the influence (or uninfluence) of the terrestrial motion on the speed of light.
    • 2019, Giuseppe Lo Re, ‎Antonina Argo, ‎Massimo Midiri, Radiology in Forensic Medicine, page 40:
      Additional advantages of postmortem imaging are its noninvasive nature, the uninfluence of radiation dosing, the reasonably brief time of execution, and the ability to detect alterations that may not be apparent on traditional autopsies.

Verb

uninfluence (third-person singular simple present uninfluences, present participle uninfluencing, simple past and past participle uninfluenced)

  1. (transitive) To exert no influence (on).
    • 1869, Edwin Grant Dexter, Conduct and the Weather:
      How a minute dose should thus affect a paralyzed nerve, while it uninfluences it in its ordinary state, is a phenomenon we cannot explain.

Etymology 2

From un- +‎ influence.

Verb

uninfluence (third-person singular simple present uninfluences, present participle uninfluencing, simple past and past participle uninfluenced)

  1. (transitive) To remove or undo the influence of.
    • 1961, Research Needs in Executive Selection: A Symposium, page 37:
      Indeed, this is one of the best ways to uninfluence people and lose friends.
    • 1970, Broadcasting, volume 78, page 72:
      U.S. advertising agencies and businessmen were criticized last Tuesday (Feb. 10) for helping to "uninfluence people" in Europe and around the world, and for fostering the alienation people in other lands have for the U.S.