denude
verb/dɪˈnjuːd/
Etymology
Definitions
To divest of all covering
To divest of all covering; to make bare or naked; to strip.
- He denuded himself of his clothes.
- Widespread deforestation has led to lands being denuded.
- But King Piko had been long harassed with the thought, that the unobstructed and indefinite increase of his browsing subjects might eventually denude of herbage his portion of the island.
To remove (something or someone) of their possessions or assets.
- Their property was seized, denuded and confiscated.
- The service was denuded of its capacity to deliver.
- And Louisa, a niece of Pierre, claimed his inheritance on the death of Suzanne. Thus, in her cruel anger, she hoped to denude the Constable of the whole of the heritage of his dead wife.
To strip (a mountain, volcano, or other geological formation) by erosion of outer layers…
To strip (a mountain, volcano, or other geological formation) by erosion of outer layers so as to lay bare the inner structure.
- The well-known hill of Arthur’s Seat, which overlooks the city of Edinburgh, and many castle-crowned crags of the Forth and Clyde valleys, are the worn and denuded relics of these small volcanoes.
The neighborhood
- neighbordenudation
- neighbordenudatory
- neighbordisrobe
- neighboruncover
Derived
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for denude. 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