Word Meanings - LOOSEN - Book Publishers vocabulary database
Etym: 1. To make loose; to free from tightness, tension, firmness, or fixedness; to make less dense or compact; as, to loosen a string, or a knot; to loosen a rock in the earth. After a year's rooting, then shaking doth the tree good by loosening
Additional info about word: LOOSEN
Etym: 1. To make loose; to free from tightness, tension, firmness, or fixedness; to make less dense or compact; as, to loosen a string, or a knot; to loosen a rock in the earth. After a year's rooting, then shaking doth the tree good by loosening of the earth. Bacon. 2. To free from restraint; to set at liberty.. It loosens his hands, and assists his understanding. Dryden. 3. To remove costiveness from; to facilitate or increase the alvine discharges of. Bacon.
Possible synonyms: (Same meaning words of LOOSEN)
- Relax
- Slacken
- loosen
- remit
- abate
- mitigate
- release
- unbend
- relent
- divert
- recreate
- rest
- enervate
- Unstring
- Shake
- Agitate
- weaken
- oscillate
- totter
- convulse
- tremble
- jar
- quiver
- shiver
- Loosen
- withhold
- languish
- flag
- moderate
Possible antonyms: (opposite words of LOOSEN)
Related words: (words related to LOOSEN)
- RELENT
1. To become less rigid or hard; to yield; to dissolve; to melt; to deliquesce. He stirred the coals till relente gan The wax again the fire. Chaucer. placed in a cellar will . . . begin to relent. Boyle. When opening buds salute the welcome day, - UNSTRIPED
Without marks or striations; nonstriated; as, unstriped muscle fibers. (more info) 1. Not striped. - RELAXANT
A medicine that relaxes; a laxative. - REMIT
1. To abate in force or in violence; to grow less intense; to become moderated; to abate; to relax; as, a fever remits; the severity of the weather remits. 2. To send money, as in payment. Addison. - SHIVER-SPAR
A variety of calcite, so called from its slaty structure; -- called also slate spar. - AGITATE
1. To move with a violent, irregular action; as, the wind agitates the sea; to agitate water in a vessel. "Winds . . . agitate the air." Cowper. 2. To move or actuate. Thomson. 3. To stir up; to disturb or excite; to perturb; as, he was greatly - SHAKE
A rapid alternation of a principal tone with another represented on the next degree of the staff above or below it; a trill. (more info) 1. The act or result of shaking; a vacillating or wavering motion; a rapid motion one way and other; - ABATER
One who, or that which, abates. - ABATE
1. To decrease, or become less in strength or violence; as, pain abates, a storm abates. The fury of Glengarry . . . rapidly abated. Macaulay. 2. To be defeated, or come to naught; to fall through; to fail; as, a writ abates. To abate - RELAXATIVE
Having the quality of relaxing; laxative. -- n. - TOTTER
1. To shake so as to threaten a fall; to vacillate; to be unsteady; to stagger; as,an old man totters with age. "As a bowing wall shall ye be, and as a tottering fence." Ps. lxii. 3. 2. To shake; to reel; to lean; to waver. Troy nods from high, - CONSTRAINTIVE
Constraining; compulsory. "Any constraintive vow." R. Carew. - FETTERLESS
Free from fetters. Marston. - DIVERTING
Amusing; entertaining. -- Di*vert"ing*ly, adv. -- Di*vert"ing*ness, n. - SHACKLE
1. To tie or confine the limbs of, so as to prevent free motion; to bind with shackles; to fetter; to chain. To lead him shackled, and exposed to scorn Of gathering crowds, the Britons' boasted chief. J. Philips. 2. Figuratively: To bind or confine - TREMBLE
1. To shake involuntarily, as with fear, cold, or weakness; to quake; to quiver; to shiver; to shudder; -- said of a person or an animal. I tremble still with fear. Shak. Frighted Turnus trembled as he spoke. Dryden. 2. To totter; to shake; -- - UNSTRAINED
1. Not strained; not cleared or purified by straining; as, unstrained oil or milk. 2. Not forced; easy; natural; as, a unstrained deduction or inference. Hakewill. - LOOSEN
Etym: 1. To make loose; to free from tightness, tension, firmness, or fixedness; to make less dense or compact; as, to loosen a string, or a knot; to loosen a rock in the earth. After a year's rooting, then shaking doth the tree good by loosening - RELEASE
To lease again; to grant a new lease of; to let back. - UNSTRIATED
Nonstriated; unstriped. - DISSHIVER
To shiver or break in pieces. - SUPREMITY
Supremacy. Fuller. - CONFINER
One who, or that which, limits or restrains. - WIND-SHAKEN
Shaken by the wind; specif. , - EFFLAGITATE
To ask urgently. Cockeram. - EREMITE
A hermit. Thou art my heaven, and I thy eremite. Keats. - HEREMITICAL
Of or pertaining to a hermit; solitary; secluded from society. Pope. - TITTER-TOTTER
See TEETER - INDIVERTIBLE
Not to be diverted or turned aside. Lamb. - OVERSHAKE
To shake over or away; to drive away; to disperse. Chaucer.