deblouse

verb

Etymology

From de- + blouse.

  1. derived from blouse
  2. formed as deblouse — “de- + blouse

Definitions

  1. To untuck one's trousers from one's boots

    To untuck one's trousers from one's boots; unblouse.

    • Everybody had debloused their pants long ago to get air circulating.
  2. To remove the blouse from.

    • Rarely has a sexploitation flick managed to have it both ways: IMPROPER CONDUCT criticizes male-dominated power plays while offering viewers a voyeuristic peep at white-collar types abusing their power to deblouse their underlings.
    • In his death, he strays in his mind to one day as a child when he stood naked and blind. Cruel trick of step children; he stood in the courtyard debloused, blindfolded and cold.
    • There was carousing and jumping, roughhousing and tumping, deblousing and thumping, arousing and humping, and ever so much dowsing and pumping.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for deblouse. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA