v
(transitive, archaic) To deprive; to cut off.
v
to remove a person or piece of hardware from active military service
n
The act of debriefing, or the state of being debriefed.
adj
Relating to decarceration, the policy of decreasing the amount of people incarcerated.
n
Discontinuation of confinement
n
The act of a company reducing its workforce, either by a reduction in recruitment, or by redundancy.
v
To cease to be united in a federation.
n
The discharge of a patient from hospital.
v
(transitive) To discharge (a patient) from hospital.
v
To cancel or return from migration (of e.g. a computer system).
v
To prevent troops from entering an area.
n
(UK) Demobilization; release from military service.
v
To release someone from military duty, especially after a war.
n
A person who is demobilized.
v
(psychiatry) To cease to repress (a belief, memory, etc.).
v
To remove from a schedule.
v
(transitive, principally in philosophy) To separate; to divide; to break off.
v
To separate (oneself); to dissolve one's association with a person, group, or situation.
v
To separate; to disunite.
v
To move something, or someone, especially to forcibly move people from their homeland.
v
(transitive) To cause disagreement or alienation among or within.
v
(intransitive) To lose the margin.
v
(transitive, figuratively, by extension) To isolate.
v
(transitive, intransitive) To deregister or unenroll (a student in Germany or Austria), as a result of graduation, expulsion, etc.
v
(transitive) To treat as exotic.
v
To separate, detach, or isolate.
v
(transitive) To set apart or cut off from others.
v
(transitive) To treat as different or separate; segregate; ostracise.
v
(idiomatic, of two or more people or things) To separate; go their own ways.
v
(figuratively, transitive) Synonym of isolate more generally.
v
(transitive or reflexive) To seclude, cut off from the community, the world etc.
v
(by extension) To separate (something from other things) in the mind; to discriminate, to distinguish.
v
(transitive) To shut off or keep apart, as from company, society, etc.; withdraw (oneself) from society or into solitude.
adj
(obsolete, rare) Separated.
v
(transitive) To separate, especially by social policies that directly or indirectly keep races or ethnic groups apart.
v
(obsolete) To set apart; to select from among others, as for a special use or service.
v
To divide the members of a group into those that are superior and those that are inferior.
v
Obsolete form of separate. [(transitive) To divide (a thing) into separate parts.]
v
(medicine, rare, transitive, nonstandard, chiefly Scandinavian, chiefly in passive) To remove (a medication) from a patient's treatment.
adj
(obsolete or Britain, dialectal) Individual, separate, set apart.
v
(transitive) To put or place in a sinecure.
v
(transitive) To select one from a group and treat differently.
v
(transitive) To separate or set apart from others; split out; segregate.
n
(Internet, informal) A conference that attempts to avoid the traditional drawbacks of conferences, such as high entry fees, excessive formality, and bias due to sponsors.
v
To disband a group that has been convened.
v
(transitive) To free from domestication; to make wild or roving.
n
One who, or that which, unplugs.
v
(transitive, nonstandard) To sort out; to resolve.
Note: Concept clusters like the one above are an experimental OneLook
feature. We've grouped words and phrases into thousands of clusters
based on a statistical analysis of how they are used in writing. Some
of the words and concepts may be vulgar or offensive. The names of the
clusters were written automatically and may not precisely describe
every word within the cluster; furthermore, the clusters may be
missing some entries that you'd normally associate with their
names. Click on a word to look it up on OneLook.
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