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Unwind   /ənwˈaɪnd/   Listen
Unwind

verb
(past & past part. unwound; pres. part. unwinding)
1.
Reverse the winding or twisting of.  Synonyms: unroll, wind off.  Antonym: wind.
2.
Separate the tangles of.  Synonym: disentangle.
3.
Become less tense, rest, or take one's ease.  Synonyms: decompress, loosen up, relax, slow down, unbend.  "Let's all relax after a hard day's work"  Antonym: tense.
4.
Cause to feel relaxed.  Synonyms: loosen up, make relaxed, relax, unlax, unstrain.  Antonyms: tense, strain.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Unwind" Quotes from Famous Books



... a thread, which, like the clue in the old story, can conduct a searcher safely through the dark recesses of the great labyrinth. He tied it, the dauntless youth in the tale, to the ancient thorn-tree that grew by the cavern's mouth; and then he stepped boldly in, and let it unwind within his hand. ...
— Escape and Other Essays • Arthur Christopher Benson

... speaking I felt my soul carried out into the light of God's face, and my grave clothes were taken off one by one as Janet would unwind my plaid, and I stood a living ...
— Beside the Bonnie Brier Bush • Ian Maclaren

... take, we unwind the jewels, the blue flowers are woven over the yellow ones, that we may give them to ...
— Ancient Nahuatl Poetry - Brinton's Library of Aboriginal American Literature Number VII. • Daniel G. Brinton

... forms a little mainspring or instinct of its own, like a parasite; so that an elaborate mechanism is gradually developed, where each lever and spring holds the other down, and all hold the mainspring down together, allowing it to unwind itself only very gradually, and meantime keeping the whole clock ticking and revolving, and causing the smooth outer face which it turns to the world, so clean and innocent, to mark the time of day amiably for the passer-by. But there is a terribly complicated labour going on beneath, propelled ...
— Some Turns of Thought in Modern Philosophy - Five Essays • George Santayana

... several times observed, both in Silk-worms and Spiders. Next, because that I find that water does easily dissolve and mollifie the substance again, which is evident from their manner of ordering those bottoms or pods of the Silk-worm before they are able to unwind them. It is no great wonder therefore, if those Dyes or ting'd liquors do very quickly mollifie and tinge the surfaces of so small and so glutinous a body. And we need not wonder that the colours appear so ...
— Micrographia • Robert Hooke


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