uncrisp
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Adjective
[edit]uncrisp (comparative more uncrisp, superlative most uncrisp)
- Not crisp.
- Not possessing firmness and freshness or brittleness (especially of foods).
- 1913, John Muir, chapter 6, in The Story of my Boyhood and Youth,[1], Boston: Houghton Mifflin, page 200:
- […] if a second crop was taken from the same ground without fertilizing it, the melons would be small and what we called soapy; that is, soft and smooth, utterly uncrisp, and without a trace of the lively freshness and sweetness of those raised on virgin soil.
- Not quick, precise, accurate or well-defined.
- 1922, E. E. Cummings, chapter 12, in The Enormous Room[2], New York: Boni and Liveright, page 250:
- […] from time to time a sort of unhealthy almost-light leaked from the large uncrisp corpse of the sky, returning for a moment to our view the ruined landscape.
- (dated) Not curling in stiff curls or ringlets (of hair).
- Synonym: straight
- 1855, Mary Anna Needell, chapter 2, in Catherine Irving[3], volume 1, London: Thomas Cautley Newby, pages 35–36:
- His light brown hair fell, in thin, uncrisp locks, about his white, prominent temples,
- Not possessing firmness and freshness or brittleness (especially of foods).
Verb
[edit]uncrisp (third-person singular simple present uncrisps, present participle uncrisping, simple past and past participle uncrisped)
- (intransitive) To become less or not crisp.
- 1978, Doris Schwerin, chapter 1, in Leanna,[4], New York: William Morrow, page 14:
- [The] metal [of the coach], jouncing on the track, massaged his behind and his pants, uncrisping, were as wet from the mangy dog as from the sweat pouring out between his legs.
- (transitive, dated) To stop contorting or tensing (a part of one's body); to cause to be no longer contorted or tensed.
- Synonyms: relax, straighten
- 1858, George Augustus Sala, chapter 12, in A Journey Due North,[5], London: Richard Bentley, page 189:
- When his miserable life is over they lay him out—that is, they pull his legs, and try to uncrisp his fingers,
- 1900, Maurice Hewlett, The Life and Death of Richard Yea-and-Nay[6], London: Macmillan, Book 2, Chapter 4, p. 265:
- She also lay white and twisting on a couch, crisping and uncrisping her little hands.
- (intransitive, dated) To stop being contorted or tensed (of a part of the body).
- Synonym: relax
- 1919, John Galsworthy, Saint’s Progress[7], New York: Scribner, Part 3, Chapter 3, p. 252:
- She saw his fingers uncrisp, then grip the shelf again.
- (transitive, archaic) To stop (something) from rippling or undulating.
- 1683, Thomas Shipman, “An Hystorick Poem”, in Carolina, or, Loyal Poems[8], London: Samuel Heyrick and William Crook, page 61:
- Behold your Neptune, with his Trident there,
Vncrisps the Billows, smoothing them like Glass;