Word Meanings - UNSWATHE - Book Publishers vocabulary database
To take a swathe from; to relieve from a bandage; to unswaddle. Addison.
Related words: (words related to UNSWATHE)
- SWATHE
To bind with a swathe, band, bandage, or rollers. Their children are never swathed or bound about with any thing when they are first born. Abp. Abbot. - SWATHER
A device attached to a mowing machine for raising the uncut fallen grain and marking the limit of the swath. - BANDAGE
1. A fillet or strip of woven material, used in dressing and binding up wounds, etc. 2. Something resembling a bandage; that which is bound over or round something to cover, strengthen, or compress it; a ligature. Zeal too had a place among the - RELIEVEMENT
The act of relieving, or the state of being relieved; relief; release. - UNSWADDLE
To take a swaddle from; to unswathe. - ADDISON'S DISEASE
A morbid condition causing a peculiar brownish discoloration of the skin, and thought, at one time, to be due to disease of the suprarenal capsules (two flat triangular bodies covering the upper part of the kidneys), but now known not - RELIEVE
discharge, relieve, fr. L. relevare to lift up, raise, make light, relieve; pref. re- re- + levare to raise, fr. levis light. See 1. To lift up; to raise again, as one who has fallen; to cause to rise. Piers Plowman. 2. To cause to seem to rise; - RELIEVER
One who, or that which, relieves. - HUSBANDAGE
The commission or compensation allowed to a ship's husband. - INSWATHE
To wrap up; to infold; to swathe. Inswathed sometimes in wandering mist. Tennyson. - ENSWATHEMENT
The act of enswathing, or the state of being enswathed. - UNSWATHE
To take a swathe from; to relieve from a bandage; to unswaddle. Addison. - ENSWATHE
To swathe; to envelop, as in swaddling clothes. Shak.