From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishrevocationrev‧o‧ca‧tion /ˌrevəˈkeɪʃən/ noun [countable, uncountable] formal SCLPGthe act of revoking a law, decision, or agreement → revoke
Examples from the Corpus
revocation• Only if its many controls fail will the ultimate sanction, i.e. revocation of the disposal licence, be invoked.• Those politicians who called for revocation of the tags already enjoyed overwhelming black support.• Such a deemed Transfer Notice shall not in any circumstances be capable of revocation.• There was a hint that the threat of revocation had been used in this and other communications with difficult councils.• And parole officers sometimes choose not to recommend revocation.