All unclothe synonyms
un·clothe
U u verb unclothe
- disrobe — Take off one's clothes.
- gapped — a break or opening, as in a fence, wall, or military line; breach: We found a gap in the enemy's line of fortifications.
- fissured — Simple past tense and past participle of fissure.
- disarrayed — Simple past tense and past participle of disarray.
- divest — to strip of clothing, ornament, etc.: The wind divested the trees of their leaves.
- hulled — retaining the hull during threshing; having a persistent enclosing hull: hulled wheat.
- expose — Make (something) visible, typically by uncovering it.
- denudate — denuded; bare
- let out — (of fur) processed by cutting parallel diagonal slashes into the pelt and sewing the slashed edges together to lengthen the pelt and to improve the appearance of the fur.
- gapping — a break or opening, as in a fence, wall, or military line; breach: We found a gap in the enemy's line of fortifications.
- excorticate — (obsolete) To strip of bark or skin.
- hulling — the hollow, lowermost portion of a ship, floating partially submerged and supporting the remainder of the ship.
- dig up — to break up, turn over, or remove earth, sand, etc., as with a shovel, spade, bulldozer, or claw; make an excavation.
- disported — to divert or amuse (oneself).
- holed — an opening through something; gap; aperture: a hole in the roof; a hole in my sock.
- get out of — extricate oneself from
- open — not closed or barred at the time, as a doorway by a door, a window by a sash, or a gateway by a gate: to leave the windows open at night.
- hit upon — to deal a blow or stroke to: Hit the nail with the hammer.
- husking — the dry external covering of certain fruits or seeds, especially of an ear of corn.
- husk — the dry external covering of certain fruits or seeds, especially of an ear of corn.
- bankrupted — Law. a person who upon his or her own petition or that of his or her creditors is adjudged insolvent by a court and whose property is administered for and divided among his or her creditors under a bankruptcy law.
- hull — Cordell [kawr-del,, kawr-del] /ˈkɔr dɛl,, kɔrˈdɛl/ (Show IPA), 1871–1955, U.S. statesman: secretary of state 1933–44; Nobel Peace Prize 1945.
- lay open — to put or place in a horizontal position or position of rest; set down: to lay a book on a desk.