How To Use Unburden In A Sentence

  • He unburdened a horse of its load.
  • Those who fled at once, unburdened by possessions, had a chance of survival, for the rain of ash and pumice, mixed with lithics, that descended for several hours was not necessarily lethal.
  • Asset management companies set up by governments in Indonesia, Korea, Malaysia and Thailand have mopped up the worst bad loans, unburdening banks by pulling the plug on deadbeat borrowers.
  • It would willingly unburden the clubs of a major share of financial responsibility to England's elite and pay the players itself through central contracting, just as England does with its top cricketers.
  • Not that I was about to unburden myself to Miss M, either; but we'd be sharing something none the less. NIGHT SISTERS
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  • America was unbound and, at least in relative terms, unburdened.
  • When something sensational happens to us, sharing the happiness of the occasion with friends intensifies our joy. Conversely, in times of trouble and tension, when our spirits are low, unburdening our worries and fears to compassionate friends alleviates the stress. 
  • She unburdened herself of her feelings of guilt.
  • Specifically, it examines their role as counselors and confessors to married and unmarried women who sought to unburden their hearts and describe in detail the contours of their emotional and erotic lives.
  • It is noteworthy she says that he unburdened himself to anyone who would listen.
  • But it has been so bad for so many years that I was glad to be unburdened.
  • When something sensational happens to us, sharing the happiness of the occasion with friends intensifies our joy. Conversely, in times of trouble and tension, when our spirits are low, unburdening our worries and fears to compassionate friends alleviates the stress. 
  • Finding the best art anywhere - even in New York - requires free-wheeling open-mindedness, unburdened by reigning ideas and trends.
  • He also wanted his players to practice as if they were individuals, unburdened by their team-mates.
  • Some students unburden themselves of emotional problems that faculty members feel ill equipped to handle.
  • Mr. Obama, unburdened by a record to defend, blames Nafta for shipping jobs abroad and "forc [ing] parents to compete with teenagers for minimum wage jobs at Wal-Mart. The Democrats and Trade
  • I suggested that he should unburden his mind and clear his conscience… by telling me the full story.
  • At least she'd listen without that distracting look of anxiety in her eyes that made it so difficult to unburden myself to Mum. LOSING IT
  • This is where those teams who arrived in Portugal unburdened by expectations of returning home with a trophy are at a possible advantage.
  • When something sensational happens to us, sharing the happiness of the occasion with friends intensifies our joy. Conversely, in times of trouble and tension, when our spirits are low, unburdening our worries and fears to compassionate friends alleviates the stress. 
  • Not that I was about to unburden myself to Miss M, either; but we'd be sharing something none the less. NIGHT SISTERS
  • Surely we would save a lot of money and resources and unburden an overwhelmed medical industry by expanding our knowledge and understanding instead of resisting.
  • But she knew from experience that if she waited long enough, he would unburden himself. THE RHYTHM SECTION
  • People have probably used language to get things off their chest for thousands of years, but venting is more than just unburdening yourself of a troublesome thought.
  • I doubt if he will be the one you unburden your soul to.
  • She needed to unburden herself to somebody.
  • Be light and playful, also eat light and remain free and unburdened.
  • But she knew from experience that if she waited long enough, he would unburden himself. THE RHYTHM SECTION
  • He unburdened a horse of its load.
  • Therefore, a certain naiveté, unburdened by conventional wisdom, can sometimes be a positive asset.
  • Largely unburdened by the need to project an alternative vision, Osborne is now aiming to attack the Chancellor's weak position.
  • Providing a safe and healing environment in which they can unburden themselves of at least some of this load is a healing in and of itself.
  • God's Son taught us that we travel light-heartedly when we travel unburdened by possessions.
  • When something sensational happens to us, sharing the happiness of the occasion with friends intensifies our joy. Conversely, in times of trouble and tension, when our spirits are low, unburdening our worries and fears to compassionate friends alleviates the stress. 
  • Some students unburden themselves of emotional problems that faculty members feel ill equipped to handle.
  • He'll unburden himself to anyone who'll listen.
  • Somehow he had to unburden his soul to somebody, and it couldn't be to Laura.
  • Occasionally, a motor wagon would thunder past him, but more often there would be bicycles and horse carts, loaded with goods, or rattling along unburdened.
  • ‘I have told you something in a moment of irresistible desire to unburden my soul which all but a fool would have kept silent as the grave,’ [Mrs Charmond] said.
  • Because Axis is unburdened by commercial imperatives, however, the site does lack a certain pizzazz.
  • Avoid being heavy and serious as a playful attitude allows you to feel unburdened and free.
  • What is more, painful remedies have been most readily accepted from those governments unburdened by past mistakes and old dogmas.
  • New shirts and new faces for the folks of the oil capital to cheer on, one unsullied and unburdened by past success or failure.
  • Times Mirror was relieved to unburden itself of the paper; it had never found a way to make the Times Herald work.
  • What is more, painful remedies have been most readily accepted from those governments unburdened by past mistakes and old dogmas.
  • It was interesting to listen to young Indians claim that 1997 was a punctuation mark, that 50 years after British rule ended it was time for the country to get on with its own life, unburdened by the past.
  • If Nick had anything else to tell him, he could unburden himself at the launch party.
  • He unburdened his soul to me.
  • There's nothing like speaking out about the things you dread most, for it's a relief to unburden yourself of your worst worries and nagging fears.
  • Many unburdened themselves in juvenile memoirs or drawings which have been shamefully neglected until recently.
  • When something sensational happens to us, sharing the happiness of the occasion with friends intensifies our joy. Conversely, in times of trouble and tension, when our spirits are low, unburdening our worries and fears to compassionate friends alleviates the stress. 
  • The Centre became a place where many came to unburden themselves, to talk about their hopes and fears.
  • Made in India, this rolling massage tool will unburden the hands of amateur masseurs and masseuses, and can double as a gift for yourself.
  • He wanted to unburden himself and he wanted her opinion on the matters that had been troubling him.
  • But Dr Kelly did not share his concerns with colleagues, and we do not yet know how much he unburdened himself to his family.
  • His voice was now sweet, now piercing, and again far too dulcet with the overkindness of burlesque; and if, as it seemed, he was unburdening his spleen, his spleen was a powerful one and gorged. Gentle Julia
  • Once the lights were low and they were sitting tucked away at a table for two she'd have no problem getting Shel to unburden himself. YELLOW BIRD
  • With these vague and imponderable concerns behind us, we may return to the main line of our story refreshed and unburdened of all such feckless speculation.
  • Many Chinese unburdened by such worries, focused instead on cashing in on the travel boom.
  • I just felt the need to unburden myself, that's all.
  • Hoss had squirmed restlessly, obviously having a tale to unburden, but uncertain where to begin.
  • Talking to a Spanish reporter, he chose to unburden himself of almost a year of frustration.
  • Some students unburden themselves of emotional problems that faculty members feel ill equipped to handle.
  • In addition to intelligence, the Creole black possesses a graceful figure, lithe movements, a pleasing face and a gentle language unburdened with any of the accents added by Africans.
  • You feel unburdened, free and happy like ‘The Fool’ today.
  • At least she'd listen without that distracting look of anxiety in her eyes that made it so difficult to unburden myself to Mum. LOSING IT
  • He clearly wanted to unburden himself about the way Labour governs the country and Parliament's ‘shameful’ inability to control the executive.
  • Finally she tossed her crippled brolly to the road and walked on in the rain and wind, as if unburdened, suddenly, by the knowledge that it was just rain after all.
  • When something sensational happens to us, sharing the happiness of the occasion with friends intensifies our joy. Conversely, in times of trouble and tension, when our spirits are low, unburdening our worries and fears to compassionate friends alleviates the stress. 
  • A Hero's Daughter has the freshness of a young author, unburdened by fame, writing about issues still alive and important to him.
  • But agile and unburdened, they resent those of us who slow up the pace a little in the frantic chaos of Saturday morning grocery acquisition.
  • Government press officers seem to feel entirely unburdened by the need to physically alter the past.
  • He knew it was a miserable way to go, without having accomplished anything or unburdened himself.
  • Other alcoholics in golf, including John Daly, Barclay Howard and Brian Barnes, have found it therapeutic to unburden themselves in public, but the healing process may be at too early a stage for Stirling.
  • It exonerates, redeems, and purifies him; it unburdens him of his wrongs, liberates him, and promises him salvation.
  • When something sensational happens to us, sharing the happiness of the occasion with friends intensifies our joy. Conversely, in times of trouble and tension, when our spirits are low, unburdening our worries and fears to compassionate friends alleviates the stress. 
  • Somehow he had to unburden his soul to somebody, and it couldn't be to Laura.
  • His call-up confirms once again that Fabio Capello is unburdened by snobbery or preconceptions. Kevin Davies gets surprise England call-up for Montenegro game
  • Somehow he had to unburden his soul to somebody, and it couldn't be to Laura.
  • It literally releases them like spores and bursts as it gets unburdened.
  • Once the lights were low and they were sitting tucked away at a table for two she'd have no problem getting Shel to unburden himself. YELLOW BIRD
  • Some students unburden themselves of emotional problems that faculty members feel ill equipped to handle.
  • Cognizant of seniors' tendency to mislay important objects, Ryan thoughtfully unburdens them with having to handle the grubby little coupons physically: those will be given directly to the insurance providers for safekeeping. Will Durst: Corroded Clockwork
  • To be fair, yesterday was all the shades of blue with a gentle breeze and three new species of fish plus a turtle to see, so today is the day to unburden myself.
  • the obedient colonies...are heavily taxed; the refractory remain unburdened
  • Her fevered dreams and the many reflections arising from conversations with her sister travelers begin to help her unburden herself of her complicated past.
  • When something sensational happens to us, sharing the happiness of the occasion with friends intensifies our joy. Conversely, in times of trouble and tension, when our spirits are low, unburdening our worries and fears to compassionate friends alleviates the stress. 
  • When something sensational happens to us, sharing the happiness of the occasion with friends intensifies our joy. Conversely, in times of trouble and tension, when our spirits are low, unburdening our worries and fears to compassionate friends alleviates the stress. 
  • The Centre became a place where many came to unburden themselves, to talk about their hopes and fears.
  • Therefore, a certain naiveté, unburdened by conventional wisdom, can sometimes be a positive asset.
  • In short, the whole point of the pub is that you go to relax and talk to people in the faint hope that when you emerge, your mind feels unburdened.
  • unburdened by an overarching theory
  • When something sensational happens to us, sharing the happiness of the occasion with friends intensifies our joy. Conversely, in times of trouble and tension, when our spirits are low, unburdening our worries and fears to compassionate friends alleviates the stress. 
  • Hillary is glad you have been able to unburden your soul, but you are making a few false assumptions yourself, my poppet.
  • When something sensational happens to us, sharing the happiness of the occasion with friends intensifies our joy. Conversely, in times of trouble and tension, when our spirits are low, unburdening our worries and fears to compassionate friends alleviates the stress. 
  • There we have it, two companies, relatively unburdened by debt, that are getting bigger as the mobile telecom industry expands.
  • Made in India, this rolling massage tool will unburden the hands of amateur masseurs and masseuses, and can double as a gift for yourself.
  • In the end, she persuades the beast to unburden himself of the guilt which afflicts him by handing over his wealth to her.
  • Irvine will be seen a candidate uninvolved in the recent fighting and unburdened by political baggage who will act as a unifying force for the overall good of the game.
  • And what an extraordinarily convenient bonus it is for these hypocrites that they get to keep all their salary, unburdened by having to pay school fees.
  • The pressure mounts for her to unburden her sister and to go back to the security of her abusive ex-spouse.
  • I'd felt content, unburdened in the café, drinking and laughing and free of gossip for a spell.
  • He killed two men but walks through life unburdened by his past because he has turned himself into an act.
  • These men are dancing, unburdened by gravity and lost in celebration, leveling the sacred and the mundane by moving like graceful angels.
  • But not far from the convention floor, at receptions and soirées across town, the truly unreconciled unburdened themselves.
  • Any swap of debt for equity would allow the company to function as a regular business, unburdened by the huge debt, but would likely leave WorldCom common shareholders with next to nothing.
  • When something sensational happens to us, sharing the happiness of the occasion with friends intensifies our joy. Conversely, in times of trouble and tension, when our spirits are low, unburdening our worries and fears to compassionate friends alleviates the stress. 
  • But the real problem with Mr. Deaver's Bond is that he's so devoid of personality, unmotivated by a consuming ideological passion like Fleming's anticommunism, so frequently contrasted with John le Carré's supposedly more sophisticated Cold War moral equivalence and unburdened by emotional complexity. You Only Live About 23 Times
  • Partisans are very good at recognizing disarray and incompetence on their side of the aisle, but they tend to think the other side is intimidatingly capable and unburdened by scruples or normal human vulnerabilities. Washington is bad at scheming
  • It enabled humans to talk unburdened by survival suits, while the Tran found it bearably tropic; a climate where different races from different temperatures could get together. The Deluge Drivers
  • unburden the donkey
  • Weren't they ever gripped by the overwhelming urge to unburden themselves, to a taxi driver, say, or a nice barman?
  • At least this one looked short; usually he went on for several pages, unburdening his soul to "cher James," in a misspelled quadrilingual patois that at least made it clear he sought no secretarial help for his personal letters. Dragonfly in Amber
  • Why not unburden yourself in Confession and let his grace flow in your life?
  • The result is a poetry in which the physis and mnemosyne — rerouted through the Keatsian image — ventriloquize his (and, perhaps, our own) deep-seated desire for an existence unburdened by the rigors of philosophical discourse or by the unrelenting ironic awareness of its impossibility. The Voice of Critique: Aesthetic Cognition After Kant,

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