v
(transitive, computing, software) To remove the limitations of demoware by providing a license; to unlock.
v
(computing, transitive) To undo (a change).
v
(transitive, computing) To remove or cancel the configuration of; to reset.
n
The separation of the components of a consolidated shipment (usually in a shared container) for delivery to their respective consignees
v
(computing, finance) To remove from an index.
v
(transitive, computing) To release any resources that were allocated to (some object or process) as part of initialization.
n
The undoing of a previous insertion
v
To reverse installation.
n
(computing) A software program that attempts to undo the work of an obfuscator, restoring readable source code.
v
(transitive, computing) To reverse a previous optimization when the assumptions that made it valid prove to be incorrect.
v
(transitive, computing) To free up or delete the accounts, resources, etc. of (a user who will no longer be using a system).
v
(transitive, computing) to remove an item from a queue
n
(computing) A process or component that removes items from a queue.
v
(transitive, graphical user interface) To remove from an existing selection.
v
(transitive) To uncreate
v
(computing, transitive, intransitive) To make (a mounted drive) unavailable for use.
v
(falconry, transitive) To drive back to the water; to pursue.
n
(computing) An overwriter program used to prevent data recovery.
n
(computing) The operation of destroying older data by recording new data over it.
v
(very rare) To create a delay by undoing what has previously been done, sometimes possibly with the intention of redoing it and repeating this cycle.
v
(transitive, computing) To perform such an operation upon.
v
(informal, figuratively) To recover mentally by taking a break or engaging in a relaxing activity.
v
(obsolete) To reduce something physical to a certain form, especially by destruction.
v
To come out of a situation, object or a liquid after having entered it.
n
(military, slang) Alternative form of repo depot [(military, slang) A replacement depot.]
v
(transitive) To fit with new rivets.
v
(transitive) To unlock again.
n
A vigorous reorganization, especially of the personnel or procedures of an organization.
v
(computing, programming, transitive) To convert portable symbols or positions to memory-dependent pointers during deserialization.
v
(computing, transitive, Unix) To unmount.
v
Alternative form of uninclude [(rare) To exclude.]
v
Alternative form of unnuke [(computing, warez, transitive) To reverse an act of nuking; to unerase, to undelete.]
v
To go back to; to undo one's abandonment of.
v
(rare) To undo an abortion.
v
(transitive, rare) To undo or reverse the acceleration of
v
(computing, transitive) To lose or get rid of; reverse the possession or acquisition of; unget
v
(transitive, intransitive) To undo the process of adaptation; to revert or restore to an original form.
v
(computing, transitive) To delete or forget the address of some entity.
v
To reverse a previous alteration
v
(transitive, computing) To undo an apply operation; to remove (something previously applied).
v
(transitive) To undo or reverse an appointment
v
(computing, transitive) To extract (a file) from a compressed archive in ARC (file format).
v
(computing, transitive) To extract from a digital archive.
n
(computing) A program or algorithm that unarchives.
v
(transitive) To undo the asking of (a question).
v
(transitive, computing) To disassemble.
n
(computing) Synonym of disassembly
v
(chiefly computing) To remove or undo the assignment of.
n
The process of unassigning.
v
To undo the process of bidding; to cancel a bid.
v
(computing, transitive) To disable some kind of connection in software, such as a key binding.
v
To restore content to something that is blank.
v
(transitive, computing, programming, Perl) To convert (a previously blessed object) back to a simple reference.
v
(cryptography, transitive) To convert (a blind signature) back to the unblinded state (as opposed to the blinded state).
v
To undo the process of booking; to cancel a booking.
v
(computing) To cause a component to be unbootable.
n
The removal of something from its box; an unpacking.
v
(transitive) To remove from a cache.
v
(transitive) To revert or undo the causing of an act or action
v
(transitive) To undo the censorship of (a work) by restoring what was censored.
v
(transitive) To revert or reverse a change
v
(graphical user interface, US, Canada) To remove a checkmark.
v
(transitive, rare) To undo the process of clearing.
v
(transitive) To undo or release a mechanism that clicks into place.
v
(transitive) To undo the climbing of; to climb down or back from.
v
to restore the original from the codified version
v
(transitive) To remove textual comments from (source code or other documents).
v
(transitive, computing) To undo a change that had been applied.
v
(transitive) To expand from a compacted state; to uncompress computer data etc.
v
(computing, transitive) To restore a compressed file to its normal size.
v
(programming, transitive) To undo the process of concatenation.
v
To remove or undo a configuration.
v
(transitive) To undo the act of creating.
v
(transitive) To bring back from a crooked position.
v
(transitive, chiefly computing) To undo the cropping of (an image).
v
(transitive, rare) To undo the cultivation of; to make uncultivated.
v
(transitive, rare) To undo the effects of curing; return (something) to an untreated state
v
(computing) To reverse the operation of currying.
n
(computing, programming) The act of undeclaring something previously declared.
v
(transitive) To reverse the process of declaring; to unsay.
v
(programming, transitive) To remove the definition of; to return to an undefined state.
v
(transitive) To restore from a deformed state; to change back to its true or original shape.
v
(transitive, computing) To recover (a file, record, etc.) from a deleted state; restore.
n
(computing) Restoration of previously deleted content.
v
(transitive, computing) To undo the deployment of; to revert to a state prior to deployment of.
v
(transitive) To undo the destruction of; to restore or recreate.
v
(computing, transitive) To cancel a process of dispatching.
v
(transitive) To restore the usual path or flow of something previously diverted.
v
To undo or cancel a divorce.
n
(computing) An operation that reverses a previous action.
v
(transitive) To restore (something illicitly altered) to its correct form.
v
(transitive) To remove documentation about; to cause to be no longer documented or recorded.
v
(computing, transitive, informal) To remove (something previously downloaded) from the device to which it was downloaded.
v
(computing, transitive) To release a file that was being edited, without saving any changes that were made.
v
(transitive, computing) To remove from encapsulation.
v
(transitive, computing) To decode.
v
(transitive) To undo or reverse the end or ending of
v
(transitive, intransitive) To undo the enrolment of; to cause (oneself or another person) to not be enrolled.
v
(transitive, computing) To restore something that has been erased.
n
(computing) A program that unerases.
v
(programming) To reverse the escaping of a string
v
(transitive, computing) To undo (a command or operation previously executed).
n
(computing) The undoing of a command or operation previously executed.
v
(transitive, computing) To cause (a password or other setting) no longer to be expired; to restore as valid.
v
(transitive) To convert (an exploded view) back to the original drawing or model.
v
(computing, transitive) To cease to export; to remove from a list of things to be exported.
v
(transitive, rare) Hypothetically, to undo the expressing of.
v
(uncommon, nonstandard) To undo or reverse the failure of; to return to an unfailed state.
v
(transitive) To undo the filtering of (data, etc.), or remove a filter from.
v
(computing, transitive) To remove a flag from.
v
(transitive) To restore (something flattened) to its previous form.
v
(transitive) To right or restore from a flipped or inverted state.
v
(graphical user interface, transitive) To move the input focus away from.
v
(computing) To remove or undo a format; to reverse the formatting of a disk.
v
(rare) To disestablish; to undo the founding of.
v
(intransitive) To resume movement.
v
To undo the act of generation; to uncreate.
v
(transitive, computing) To restore from a ghosted state.
v
(transitive, computing) To decode (something previously hashed).
v
(transitive) To reverse the process of hearing, so that (a sound, etc.) was never heard.
v
(transitive) To undo or impede the help of.
v
(transitive, graphical user interface) To undo a hide action.
v
(transitive, computing) To remove a selection highlight from.
v
(transitive) To cease ignoring (a blocked user on an online chat system, etc.).
v
(transitive) To undo, in (a person or animal), the psychological process of imprinting.
v
To undo or remove the incorporation of.
v
(transitive) To revert (someone) to an uninformed state; reverse the informing of
n
(computing) An uninstallation process.
n
(software) The process of removing a program from a computer.
n
(computing) A program that uninstalls software.
v
(programming, transitive) To destroy or annul (an instance of something); to eliminate (a variable, object, etc.) that was created earlier.
v
(transitive) To undo the invention of; to unmake.
v
(transitive) To restore from an inverted state; to turn the right way round again.
v
(transitive) To undo or reverse the launching of.
v
(transitive) To discard the knowledge of.
v
(transitive, computing, Unix) To delete (a file).
n
(computing) A program or process that unlinks.
v
(transitive) To undo the process of listing; to remove something from a list.
v
(computing) To cease to listen for incoming signals.
v
(transitive) To undo having lived (a period of time) (for example, by living it in reverse), so that it ceases to have happened.
v
(transitive, computing) To remove (something previously loaded) from memory.
v
(transitive) To undo the act of mailing; to recover from the postal system before delivery.
v
(transitive, computing) To remove the mapping of (a device, etc.).
v
(transitive, computing) To remove marks from.
v
(computing, transitive) To decode from a marshalled state.
v
Alternative form of unmarshal [(computing, transitive) To decode from a marshalled state.]
v
(transitive, computing) To enable (an interrupt, etc.) by unsetting or setting the associated bit.
v
(transitive, computing, graphical user interface) To restore (a window) from a maximized state.
v
(computing, rare) To reverse the process of migration; to switch back to an older system.
v
(transitive, computing, graphical user interface) To restore (a window) from a minimized state.
v
To undo the act of morphing; to change back to its original form.
v
(computing, transitive) To reverse a mount operation; to instruct the operating system that the file system should be disassociated from its mount point, making it no longer accessible.
v
(mathematics) To reverse the process of multiplication; to find the factors of.
v
(transitive) To restore the sound output (on a speaker or other audio device), having previously muted it.
v
(computing, warez, transitive) To reverse an act of nuking; to unerase, to undelete.
v
(figuratively, transitive) To analyze a concept or a text; to explain.
v
(transitive, computing, graphical user interface) To detach (an object) from its parent object.
v
(transitive, computing theory) To perform the reverse operation of parsing upon.
v
(computing, transitive) To remove the partitions from (a disk drive, a database, etc.).
v
(transitive, rare) To undo the passing of; to cause (a law, etc.) not to have been passed.
v
(computing, transitive, rare) To undo the process of patching; to remove a patch from.
v
(informal) To resume the normal functioning of electronic equipment or a software program in a paused state.
v
(transitive, computing) To remove from permanent storage; to make temporary again.
v
(transitive) To restore (something turned to stone) to its prior form; to undo the petrifaction of.
v
(transitive, programming, in the Python programming language) To deserialize.
v
(programming, transitive) To undo the pinning or fixing of (an array in memory, a security certificate, etc.) so that it can be modified again.
v
(transitive, computing, databases) To convert columns into rows, so as to undo a pivot operation.
v
(transitive) To undo the planning of (something previously planned); to cancel.
v
(transitive) Hypothetically, to undo the playing of.
n
(computer graphics) The process of unpremultiplying.
v
(computer graphics) To divide a premultiplied matrix by a preceding factor noncommutatively
v
(transitive) Hypothetically, to undo the printing of.
v
(transitive) To undo the proofing of; expose to the possibility of failure.
v
(computing, transitive) To remove protection from.
n
The process of unpublishing something.
v
(transitive, chiefly computing) To remove (something previously published) from circulation; to retract.
v
(computing, transitive) To restore from a quiesced state.
v
(transitive, computing) To decompress (a compressed archive in the RAR format).
v
To remove the rating from something.
v
(transitive) To undo the process of reading.
v
(transitive) To remove something that has been recorded.
v
(transitive) To restore (redacted material).
v
(intransitive) To undo a registration process.
v
(transitive, rare) To undo the release of; to withdraw.
n
(chiefly computing) The undoing or cancellation of a reservation.
v
To undo work that was done to restore something.
v
(transitive) To restore from a reversed state; to reverse again, so as to turn the right way round.
v
Hypothetically, to reverse the act of ringing, or the consequences of the action.
v
(idiomatic) To reverse the irreversible; to perform the impossible.
v
(transitive, programming, software compilation) To replace (a loop in a program) with a repetitive sequence of the individual instructions that the loop would carry out, sometimes used as an optimization.
v
(computer graphics) To undo a rotation.
v
(transitive) To fix or restore something that was previously ruined; to bring back to a whole or functioning state.
v
(computing, transitive) To undo an act of saving; to erase.
v
(transitive) To reverse the process of scrambling, decrypt.
v
To open or unfold progressively, as a scroll does.
v
To undo the act of seeing something; to erase the memory of having seen something, or otherwise reverse the effect of having seen something.
v
(computing, transitive) To cancel a previous selection, especially by removing a mark from a tick box.
v
(transitive, messaging, email, text messaging) To undo, cancel, or reverse the transmission of a message
v
(transitive) To deserialize.
v
(graphical user interface, transitive) To restore a window from its shaded (collapsed) state.
v
(computing, Unix) To extract data from a file in the shar (shell archive) format.
v
(computing, transitive) To stop sharing (a network resource etc.).
v
(transitive, intransitive) To reverse the process of shattering; to unbreak.
n
The act of unshipping, or the state of being unshipped; displacement.
v
(transitive) To restore (something shrunken) to its original size.
v
(transitive, rare) To remove the sight of or from
v
(transitive) To undo or annul a past sin.
v
(rare, transitive) To take back something sung; to undo the singing of.
v
To undo or remove the solution to a problem; to put something into an unsolved state.
v
(computing) To shuffle a data structure so that it is no longer sorted.
v
(transitive) To undo the specification of.
v
(computing, transitive) To move (a file) out of the staging area (where files are kept in preparation to be committed and deployed).
v
(rare, transitive) To undo the act of stamping something; to remove a stamp from.
v
(transitive) To withdraw (something previously stated); to unsay or retract.
v
(transitive) To rearrange or reposition something so that it is no longer straight.
v
(transitive, computing, programming, COBOL) To split (a text string) into smaller strings by separating on a delimiter.
v
(object-oriented programming, transitive) To cause (a previously subclassed window or object) no longer to act like a member of a subclass.
v
(transitive, computing) To cause no longer to be suppressed; to undo the suppression of.
v
(transitive) To allow to continue after a period of suspension.
v
(transitive) To resolve or restraighten (something previously swirled).
v
(computing, programming, transitive) To convert memory-dependent pointers to portable symbols or positions during serialization.
n
(computing) The process of untabifying.
v
(transitive, computing) To reformat (text) by converting tab characters into spaces.
v
(transitive, archaic) To undo or reverse the counting of; to count back.
v
(transitive) To undo the termination of; to restore to an active or valid state.
v
(transitive, intransitive) To undo the process of thinking.
v
(programming, transitive) In the Perl programming language, to undo the process of tying, so that a variable uses default instead of custom functionality.
v
(transitive) To restore to its original orientation, from a tilted orientation.
v
(computing, programming, transitive) To remove a trace from.
v
(transitive, education) To change (an educational course) so that students are no longer ranked by ability.
v
To reverse or undo one's training; to become less trained than before
v
(transitive) To reverse the transformation of; to change or convert back to a previous state.
v
(computer graphics, CAD) To restore the original shape of (a surface that has been trimmed).
v
To erase text that has been typed.
v
(transitive) To restore from a warped state.
v
(transitive, rare) To undo the watching of something; to unsee.
v
(transitive, computing) To undelete; to restore (data, files, etc.) previously wiped.
v
(transitive) To undo a wish
v
(transitive) To undo or destroy (work previously done).
v
(transitive) To undo or reverse the wrecking of; (by extension) to repair; restore to good use; salvage
v
To erase; to revert to a state where (something) was never written.
v
(computing, transitive) To restore (compressed data) to its original form, from a zip file.
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
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