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Word Meanings - DISENCUMBRANCE - Book Publishers vocabulary database

Freedom or deliverance from encumbrance, or anything burdensome or troublesome. Spectator.

Related words: (words related to DISENCUMBRANCE)

  • DELIVERANCE
    Any fact or truth which is decisively attested or intuitively known as a psychological or philosophical datum; as, the deliverance of consciousness. (more info) 1. The act of delivering or freeing from restraint, captivity, peril, and the like;
  • SPECTATORSHIP
    1. The office or quality of a spectator. Addison. 2. The act of beholding. Shak.
  • TROUBLESOME
    Giving trouble or anxiety; vexatious; burdensome; wearisome. This troublesome world. Book of Common Prayer. These troublesome disguises that we wear. Milton. My mother will never be troublesome to me. Pope. Syn. -- Uneasy; vexatious; perplexing;
  • ANYTHINGARIAN
    One who holds to no particular creed or dogma.
  • FREEDOM
    1. The state of being free; exemption from the power and control of another; liberty; independence. Made captive, yet deserving freedom more. Milton. 2. Privileges; franchises; immunities. Your charter and your caty's freedom. Shak. 3. Exemption
  • SPECTATOR
    One who on; one who sees or beholds; a beholder; one who is personally present at, and sees, any exhibition; as, the spectators at a show. "Devised and played to take spectators." Shak. Syn. -- Looker-on; beholder; observer; witness.
  • BURDENSOME
    Grievous to be borne; causing uneasiness or fatigue; oppressive. The debt immense of endless gratitude So burdensome. Milton. Syn. -- Heavy; weighty; cumbersome; onerous; grievous; oppressive; troublesome. -- Bur"den*some*ly, adv. -- Bur"den*some*ness,
  • ENCUMBRANCE
    See HINDRANCE (more info) 1. That which encumbers; a burden which impedes action, or renders it difficult and laborious; a clog; an impediment. See Incumbrance.
  • ENCUMBRANCER
    See INCUMBRANCER
  • SPECTATORIAL
    Of or pertaining to a spectator. Addison.
  • ANYTHING
    1. Any object, act, state, event, or fact whatever; thing of any kind; something or other; aught; as, I would not do it for anything. Did you ever know of anything so unlucky A. Trollope. They do not know that anything is amiss with them. W. G.
  • ENFREEDOM
    To set free. Shak.
  • REDELIVERANCE
    A second deliverance.
  • DISENCUMBRANCE
    Freedom or deliverance from encumbrance, or anything burdensome or troublesome. Spectator.
  • OVERBURDENSOME
    Too burdensome.

 

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