Advertisement
Advertisement
disburden
/ ɪˈɜːə /
verb
to remove a load from (a person or animal)
(tr) to relieve (oneself, one's mind, etc) of a distressing worry or oppressive thought
Other Word Forms
- disburdenment noun
- 徱ˈܰԳԳ noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of disburden1
Example Sentences
It suggests a kind of heaven: a place a person might go to achieve universal salvation, to be disburdened of her sins and returned to eternity.
At one point, Faye thinks that the storytelling impulse itself “might spring from the desire to avoid guilt,” to “disburden ourselves of responsibility.”
After all this, The Blot was “a conscious attempt to get back to a more straightforward storytelling”; it is mostly “disburdened of social ethical frameworks”.
The prevailing trend of our time is, it seems, a disburdening of the past.
The Internet may have freed many to disburden themselves of their views.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse