unsuffocate
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Verb
[edit]unsuffocate (third-person singular simple present unsuffocates, present participle unsuffocating, simple past and past participle unsuffocated)
- To unsmother; to free from suffocation or suffocating circumstances.
- 1821, George Gordon Byron, Don Juan in sixteen cantos:
- And galvanism has set some corpses grinning, But has not answer'd like the apparatus Of the Humane Society's beginning, By which men are unsuffocated gratis:
- 1955, Technique; Revue Industrielle. Industrial Review:
- But here is an honest attempt to unsuffocate the central part of the city, which was like a plumpish woman with a pair of diabolical tight corsets cutting into her waist.
- 1963, The Poetry Magazine, page 36:
- Because academics have had cause from earliest times to unsuffocate themselves, as it were, in the fields?
- 2013, Eugene Burdick, Harvey Wheeler, Fail-Safe:
- He had spent his life, it seemed, re-covering David and unsuffocating John.