decompress
verb/diːkəmˈpɹɛs/UK
Etymology
From de- + compress.
- derived from compressus
- derived from compressare
- derived from compresser
- inherited from compressen
Definitions
To relieve the pressure or compression on something.
To bring someone (such as a diver) back to normal atmospheric pressure after being…
To bring someone (such as a diver) back to normal atmospheric pressure after being exposed to high pressure.
To restore (compressed data) to its original form.
›+ 2 more definitionsshow fewer
To adjust to normal atmospheric pressure after being exposed to high pressure.
- The bad news is we got eight hours in this can blowin' down… And the worse news is, it's gonna take us three weeks to decompress later.
- There was a typical reef construction here with large plating corals at deeper depths. Thankfully, again there were many new corals. We decompressed for several minutes before boarding. Then Mike really got sick. He skipped the next dive.
To relax.
- [T]he idea began before lockdown, when he went on holiday to Thailand to decompress from the pressures of life in the music industry.
The neighborhood
- antonymcompress
Derived
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for decompress. 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