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uncinch

vb. (context transitive English) To loosen (a saddle, a belt, etc.).

Usage examples of "uncinch".

Her fingers might have felt stiff, but they worked, and she used them to uncinch the weapon harness.

She reined in and dismounted, and the mare hung her head while she uncinched the saddle.

Behind closed doors he plopped into his leather chair and uncinched his tie.

He reined off the riverside trail into stirrup-high rabbitbrush that for them horses to browse as he uncinched his borrowed stock saddle and put it aboard the buckskin, telling the paint he was sorry those Mexican kids back at Rancho Alvera had apparently allowed it to cool off too fast.

The man shouted something incomprehensible into the stable and uncinched the parade gear.

The girth was uncinched and he swept saddle and blanket to the ground.

He reined off the riverside trail into stirrup-high rabbitbrush that for them horses to browse as he uncinched his borrowed stock saddle and put it aboard the buckskin, telling the paint he was sorry those Mexican kids back at Rancho Alvera had apparently allowed it to cool off too fast.

She reined in and dismounted, and the mare hung her head while she uncinched the saddle.

The man shouted something incomprehensible into the stable and uncinched the parade gear.

Garric uncinched his buckler and, holding it in his left hand, went to Ilna's side.

Garric uncinched his buckler and, holding it in his left hand, went to Ilna’s side.

Here now—” She uncinched the pack saddle and lifted it from Star’s back.

Lord Chaynal endured his wife’s blistering comments about his probable lifespan and undoubted ancestry while he uncinched his saddle and checked his stallion’s hooves for stray stones.

One of the stronger guards finally began to gather the makings for a fire, while another crabbed down the line of horses, doing little more than uncinching saddles and dragging them from the horses' backs.

One of the stronger guards finally began to gather the makings for a fire, while another crabbed down the line of horses, doing little more than uncinching saddles and dragging them from the horses’ backs.