different between unsake vs unsafe
unsake
English
Etymology
From Middle English onsaken, from Old English onsacan (“to attack, strive against”), from Proto-Germanic *ansakan?, *andsakan? (“to resist, object”), equivalent to un- +? sake. Cognate with Old Saxon andsakan, antsakan (“to deny, defend oneself”).
Verb
unsake (third-person singular simple present unsakes, present participle unsaking, simple past unsook, past participle unsaken)
- (transitive, rare, obsolete) To forsake.
- 1807, The Gothic Gospel of Saint Matthew:
- But he that unsakes (forsakes) me before men, I unsake him before Father mine he that is in heaven.
- 1807, The Gothic Gospel of Saint Matthew:
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unsafe
English
Etymology
From un- +? safe.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?n?se?f/
- Rhymes: -e?f
Adjective
unsafe (comparative more unsafe, superlative most unsafe)
- Not safe (various senses); dangerous.
Synonyms
- (not held or fixed securely and likely to fall over): precarious, rickety, shaky, tottering, unsteady, unstable, wobbly
Translations
Verb
unsafe (third-person singular simple present unsafes, present participle unsafing, simple past and past participle unsafed)
- (transitive) To remove the safety from (a weapon).
Anagrams
- faunes, fausen
unsafe From the web:
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