unabatement
nounEtymology
From un- + abate + -ment.
- derived from ab-
- derived from abatre
- derived from abattre
- derived from abater
- inherited from abaten — “to demolish, knock down; to defeat, strike down; to strike or take down (a sail); to throw down; to bow dejectedly or submissively; to be dejected; to stop; to defeat, humiliate; to repeal (a law); to dismiss or quash (a lawsuit); to lessen, reduce; to injure, impair; to appease; to decline, grow less; to deduct, subtract; to make one’s way; attack (an enemy); (law) to enter or intrude upon (someone’s property); of a hawk: to beat or flap the wings”
- derived from batto
- derived from abbatto
- derived from abatre
- inherited from abaten
Definitions
The situation of going on unabated, without ceasing
The situation of going on unabated, without ceasing; continuation.
The neighborhood
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for unabatement. 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