unconfound

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English

Etymology

From un- +‎ confound.

Pronunciation

Verb

unconfound (third-person singular simple present unconfounds, present participle unconfounding, simple past and past participle unconfounded)

  1. (transitive) To free from a state of confusion.
    • 1649, J M, The Tenure of Kings and Magistrates: , London: Matthew Simmons,  Lyon in Aldersgate Street">…], published 1649 (2nd printing), →OCLC:
      they boast to be the throne and scepter of Christ, abſolve him, unconfound him, though unconverted, unrepentant, unſenſible of all thir pretious Saints and Martyrs whose blood they have ſo oft laid upon his head
    • 1975, The Northwest Technocrat - Volumes 37-42, page 17:
      Perhaps the following material, taken from the "Technocracy Study Course" will serve to "unconfound" some of the utterances we hear, which surely must be intended to "confound."
    • 2004, Algorithmic Graph Theory and Perfect Graphs, page xix:
      But the greatest and most crucial help has come from my wife Lynn. Although not a mathematician, she managed to unconfound much of this mathematician's gibberish.
  2. To distinguish between things or situations that have been combined in a way that makes them indistinguishable.
    • 1779, Philip Dormer Stanhope, Miscellaneous Works of Lord Chesterfield, page 161:
      I reckon that my god-ſon now begins to chatter, and to confound two or three languages. No matter; they are ſo much clear gain to him, and in time he will unconfound them of himſelf .
    • 2005, David J. Schneider, The Psychology of Stereotyping:
      The most important question, however, is whether he can easily put those observations together and unconfound the effects of role and gender on trait ascriptions.
    • 2006, Gregory R. Bock, Jamie A. Goode, Understanding Nicotine and Tobacco Addiction, page 62:
      What you need to do is unconfound the nicotine intake from the other smoking-associated stimuli.
    • 2012, Norman Frederiksen, Robert J. Mislevy, Test Theory for A New Generation of Tests, page 53:
      There are several ways to unconfound correlated predictors, all of which use some variant of the subtractive method.
    • 2013, Axel Cleeremans, Robert French, Implicit Learning and Consciousness, page 103:
      In short, it is very hard to create test items that unconfound grammatically and fragment composition.