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View synonyms for
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
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Derived Forms
- 徱ˈܰԳԳ, noun
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Other Word Forms
- 徱·ܰd·Գ noun
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Word History and Origins
Origin of disburden1
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Example Sentences
Examples have not been reviewed.
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.
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At one point, Faye thinks that the storytelling impulse itself “might spring from the desire to avoid guilt,” to “disburden ourselves of responsibility.”
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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”.
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The prevailing trend of our time is, it seems, a disburdening of the past.
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The Internet may have freed many to disburden themselves of their views.
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