unreserve
English
Etymology
From un- + reserve.
Noun
unreserve (countable and uncountable, plural unreserves)
- (uncountable) A lack or absence of reserve; frankness; uninhibitedness. [from 18th c.]
- c. 1792–3, Jane Austen, ‘Catharine, or The Bower’, Juvenilia:
- Kitty, tho' perhaps not authorized to address him with so much familiarity on so short an acquaintance, could not forbear indulging the natural Unreserve and Vivacity of her own Disposition, in speaking to him, as he spoke to her.
- c. 1792–3, Jane Austen, ‘Catharine, or The Bower’, Juvenilia:
- (countable, India) A forest that is not set aside as a reserve.
Verb
unreserve (third-person singular simple present unreserves, present participle unreserving, simple past and past participle unreserved)
- (transitive, chiefly computing) To undo or cancel a reservation.
Related terms
- unreservation
Anagrams
- revenuers, unreverse