Find the word definition

Crossword clues for unmoor

The Collaborative International Dictionary
Unmoor

Unmoor \Un*moor"\, v. t. [1st pref. un- + moor.] (Naut.)

  1. To cause to ride with one anchor less than before, after having been moored by two or more anchors.

  2. To loose from anchorage. See Moor, v. t.

Unmoor

Unmoor \Un*moor"\, v. i. To weigh anchor.
--Sir W. Scott.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
unmoor

late 15c., "to free from moorings," from un- (2) "reverse, opposite of" + moor (v.). Related: Unmoored.

Wiktionary
unmoor

vb. (context transitive English) To unfix or unsecure (a moored boat).

Usage examples of "unmoor".

At the same time her people prepared to unmoor, and shortly after the last boat had been hoisted in, her eighteen-inch cables began to fill the tiers, bringing with them a great deal of water and the distinctive smell of Porto Praya ooze, which at least made a change in the stagnant fetor of the orlop.

Of all the boats that lay at rest there, not one in sight was unmoored, not one contained a boatman!

Alun was unmoored and knew it, a ship without rudder or sails, no charts by which to navigate.

At dawn they got their anchors, and set sail towards the Spaniards, who at once unmoored, and beat to quarters.

For one awful instant they were suspended above disaster, the keel of the boat riding the force of the torrent like a reversed magnet, unloosed, unmoored, out of control, the sharp spray in their faces, Henry shouting out encouragement to the straining motors, grinning Jalong in the bow with a plastic bucket bailing like mad, the bouncing Copelands trying not to glance too often at one another with the blanched appeal of stricken airline passengers, the fragile longboat, as if responding to psychic entreaty, moved forward an inch, another inch, then, in one sweet dizzying lift, rose up and over the crest of the falls onto a slick moving sheet of unruffled stream, and they looked around at themselves and they laughed.

But she was removed that afternoon, and I felt a bit like the man who sees a vessel unmoored and speculates.

For all realities of life, unmoored From their firm anchorage, appeared to float Like hollow phantoms past my dizzy brain.

Owan went to the bows with seeming unhurriedness, although he was actually moving very fast, and unmoored the boat.

A world had been born and sent upon its way, but its unmooring was somewhat catastrophic, though it might not have seemed so on the outside.

Saying prayers for the dead, Drew had dumped the body overboard and guided the yacht south along the coastline, finding a private dock where after removing his fingerprints, he left the yacht unmoored, letting it drift back out to the Bay.