unwrinkle
English
editEtymology
editVerb
editunwrinkle (third-person singular simple present unwrinkles, present participle unwrinkling, simple past and past participle unwrinkled)
- (transitive) To remove wrinkles from.
- 1935, Elizabeth Bowen, The House in Paris[1], New York: Vintage, published 1957, Part Two, p. 140:
- He and she sat side by side like two wax people while the waiter stretched across to unwrinkle the tablecloth and straighten the knives.
- (intransitive) To stop being wrinkly; to become flat or smooth.
- 1959, Mervyn Peake, chapter 66, in Titus Alone[3], New York: Ballantine, published 1968, page 179:
- His head protruded out of his torn collar much as the head of the tortoise protrudes from its shell, the throat unwrinkling, the eyes like beads, or pips of jet.
- 1987, Derek Walcott, “Cul de Sac Valley”, in The Arkansas Testament[4], New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, page 11:
- In a rain barrel, water
unwrinkles to glass;
a lime tree’s daughter
there studies her face.
- 1996, Charles Mathes, chapter 15, in The Girl Who Remembered Snow[5], New York: St. Martin’s Press, page 212:
- Emma went through the closet and removed the black gabardine jacket she had hung up to unwrinkle.
Synonyms
edit- (remove wrinkles from): flatten out, smooth
Translations
editto remove wrinkles from
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