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unline. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
unline, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
unline in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
unline you have here. The definition of the word
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English
Etymology
From un- + line.
Verb
unline (third-person singular simple present unlines, present participle unlining, simple past and past participle unlined)
- To remove or separate the lining from.
1848, T. H. Pasley, The Philosophy which Shows the Physiology of Mesmerism, page 87:as in the case of gout, a disease of the sufferer's own making, from excess of de-electrising food and drink, which uncoats and unlines the nerves, and thus leaves the nervous fluid, from casual circumstances, to almost lacerate the brain.
1895, Richard Doddridge Blackmore, Fringilla, page 44:No more that unenquiring heart Perused the sweet home of her breast, Than turtle-doves unline their nest To scan the outer part.
1917, Eugène-Louis Doyen, Surgical Therapeutics and Operative Technique, page 179:These instruments are so produced as to suit the procedure of vivification by unlining, which is the one that I exclusively employ .
- (botany) To undergo a (now debunked) process in which the tissue of a plant separates into identical layers.
1848, John Lindley, An Introduction to Botany:There is no instance of unlining which may not be as well explained by the theory of alternation.
1870, Asa Gray, Introduction to Structural and Systematic Botany, page 243:The name dédoublement of Duval, which has been translated deduplication, literally means unlining'; the original hypothesis being, that the organs in question unline, or tend to separate into two or more layers, each having the same structure.
1881, Henri Baillon, The Natural History of Plants - Volume 7, page 105:The carpophore unlines itself at maturity, and the vittæ are wide and solitary in each furrow.
- (figurative) To empty (a purse).
1857, John Webster, “The Weakest Goeth To the Wall”, in William Hazlitt, editor, The dramatic works of John Webster, page 254:I'll live by a pittance. Unline my purse, and use my person, and for my limbs, take the best in the bunch.
1892, E. J. Sanborn, “Comfort in a Corner”, in Dramas, page 54:How many old, Decrepit packs of eighty do we see Get wives, that first unline their purse, then out, Like skinless rats, drive their lean carcasses.
1991, John Ford, edited by Leo Edward Stock, The Nondramatic Works of John Ford, page 10:As now rich Opportunity doth give to make you Fame-full though it empt your Pouche: Two Kings thus met, make Kingdomes richly thrive, though it unlines their Purse with wearing much: Then, sith but seld, or ne're Kings consort thus, Be glorious now, or still inglorious.
- To take out of (literal or figurative) alignment; to disconnect.
1598, John Marston, The Scourge of Villanie:To-morrow doth Luxurio promise me He will unline himself from bitchery ;
1903, Robert Hallowell Richards, Breaking, crushing and comminuting, page 16:When the eccentric lowers the pitman, it unlines the toggles and the swing jaw is free to recede from the fixed jaw .
2018, James Banks, Letters to People Who Care, page 26:And as I've been walking, sure enough, I see little white dots on the hills, those little sheep, and I can see cattle lined up and then unlining about a mile off on the plains .
- To remove or destroy one or more lines.
1871, W.M. Statham, “The Branch Line”, in The Quiver, page 33:However, I am a Line, and they can't "unline" me very well. My soil is not good enough for a market-garden, and if it were, the surrounding inhabitants are too sparse to require so large a supply of the vegetable world.
1905, Giuseppe Mazzini, Life and Writings of Giuseppe Mazzini- Volume 2, page 282:She will ask herself whether the confined and relative reason of the artist can be deemed superior to the infinite, absolute reason of the Creator; whether it is for man to rectify God; whether mutilation can improve the beauty of nature; whether are be authorised to unline—if we may use the word — man, life, creation; . . . . whether, in fine, incompleteness be an element of harmony?
1908, “Advertisement: Automobile Facts”, in Circle: A Modern Department Magazine, volume 3, page 371:Maxwell cars are of unit construction that no stress can unline.