unbosom
English
WOTD – 18 July 2009
Verb
unbosom (third-person singular simple present unbosoms, present participle unbosoming, simple past and past participle unbosomed)
- (transitive, intransitive, archaic) To tell someone about (one's troubles), and thus obtain relief.
- 1594, Shakespeare, Willam, Love's Labour's Lost, act V, scene 2, line 2040:
- Their several counsels they unbosom shall
To loves mistook, and so be mock'd withal
Upon the next occasion that we meet,
With visages displayed, to talk and greet.
- 1863, Sheridan Le Fanu, The House by the Churchyard
- At first Puddock was reserved, but recollecting that he had been left quite free to tell whom he pleased, he made up his mind to unbosom; and suggested, for the sake of quiet and a longer conversation, that they should go round by the ferry.
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- (reflexive, archaic) To free (oneself) of the burden of one's troubles by telling of them.
- 1953, Beckett, Samuel, Watt, Paris: Olympia Press, OL 16635912M:
- Watt was not the first to whom Mr Graves had unbosomed himself, in this connexion. For he had unbosomed himself to Arsene, many years before […]
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- (archaic) To confess a misdeed.
Translations
to tell about one's troubles
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to confess a misdeed
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