uncowl
English
Verb
uncowl (third-person singular simple present uncowls, present participle uncowling, simple past and past participle uncowled)
- (transitive) To divest or deprive of a cowl (monk's hood or hooded robe).
- The template Template:RQ:Pope Dunciad does not use the parameter(s):
url=http://name.umdl.umich.edu/004809148.0001.000
Please see Module:checkparams for help with this warning.1728, [Alexander Pope], “Book the Third”, in The Dunciad. An Heroic Poem. […], Dublin, London: […] A. Dodd, →OCLC, page 41:- See’st thou an Isle, by Palmers, Pilgrims trod,
Men bearded, bald, cowl’d, uncowl’d, shod, unshod,
- 1849, L. Mariotti, chapter 11, in Italy, Past and Present, volume 2, London: Chapman, pages 389–399:
- Can the pope, to say nothing of himself and his cardinals, do away with his four archbishops and ninety-eight bishops? Will he reduce the prodigious number of his priests, who muster as strong as one twenty-eighth of the population? Will he uncowl his monks, two thousand and twenty-three of whom swarm about the streets of Rome alone?
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- (transitive, figurative, archaic) To uncover; to unveil.
- 1797, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Osorio, London: John Pearson, 1873, Act I, p. 24,
- I pray you, think us friends—uncowl your face,
- For you seem faint, and the night-breeze blows healing.
- 1850, John Savage, “Love in the Golden Vale”, in Lays of the Fatherland, New York: J.S. Redfield, page 91:
- While we uncowl our souls,
Bare to the God who rolls
Earth on its icy poles,
Clasp me in pray’r.
- 1797, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Osorio, London: John Pearson, 1873, Act I, p. 24,
- (instransitive) To remove or pull back one's cowl.
- 1859, Louis Alexis Chamerovzow, chapter 1, in The Chronicles of the Bastile, New York: Stanford & Delisser, page 26:
- “Monseigneur, it is not often your capuchin uncowls; least of all when he wishes to remain unknown! […] ”
- 1905, Charles Whistler, chapter 16, in A King’s Comrade:
- And thence, after a word or two had passed, came the priest I had seen; and when he uncowled I knew him for my friend Selred, and glad I was to see him.
- 1972, John Barth, “Perseid”, in Chimera, New York: Fawcett Crest, page 103:
- She wouldn’t uncowl, for modesty she said, but let me ground her and lift dun shift to white shoulders.
- (transitive) To remove the cowl (protective covering) from (an engine).
- 1994, Geza Szurovy, Mike Goulian, chapter 20, in Basic Aerobatics, Blue Ridge Summit, PA: TAB Books, page 217:
- Uncowl the engine, check for evidence of any leaks.
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