# Ignore The Alias When Running A Command I have a number of shell aliases set up to override one command with another. For instance, I want to run `bat` anytime I type `cat`, so I have `alias cat=bat` in my shell configuration. But what if I were to ever want to run `cat` instead of `bat`? Aliases can be ignored several ways: 1. Precede the command with a backslash. ```bash $ \cat ``` 2. Wrap the command in quotes. ```bash $ 'cat' ``` 3. Pass the command to `command`. ```bash $ command cat ``` [source](https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/39291/run-a-command-that-is-shadowed-by-an-alias)