Unfurnish
1Unfurnish — Un*fur nish, v. t. [1st pref. un + furnish.] To strip of furniture; to divest; to strip. [1913 Webster] …
2unfurnish — “+ transitive verb Etymology: un (II) + furnish 1. archaic : to strip (as a place or a man) of means of defense 2. obsolete : divest …
3unfurnish — un·furnish …
4unfurnish — /ʌnˈfɜnɪʃ/ (say un fernish) verb (t) to remove the furnishing or furnishings from …
5Unprovide — Un pro*vide, v. t. [1st pref. un + provide.] To deprive of necessary provision; to unfurnish. [1913 Webster] Lest her . . . beauty unprovide my mind again. Shak. [1913 Webster] …
6Battle of Neville's Cross — Infobox Military Conflict conflict=Battle of Neville s Cross caption=Battle of Neville s Cross from a 15th century Froissart manuscript (BN MS Fr. 2643). partof=the Hundred Years War and the Second War of Scottish Independence date=October 17,… …
7disfurnish — v. a. Unfurnish, strip, divest, dismantle, disgarnish …
8appoint — [v1] assign responsibility; decide accredit, allot, assign, choose, command, commission, decree, delegate, designate, determine, direct, elect, enjoin, establish, finger, fix, install, name, nominate, ordain, select, set, settle, tap; concepts 41 …
9furnish — [v1] decorate, supply accoutre, apparel, appoint, arm, array, clothe, endow, equip, feather a nest*, fit, fit out*, fix up*, gear, line a nest*, make habitable, outfit, provide, provision, purvey, rig, stock, store, turn out; concepts 140,177,182 …
10dis|man|tle — «dihs MAN tuhl», transitive verb, tled, tling. 1. to remove furniture or equipment from; unfurnish: »to dismantle a house. The warship was dismantled before the hull was sold for scrap metal. 2. to pull down; take apart: »We had to dismantle the… …