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Looking for synonyms for "uncover"? Browse alternatives ranked by relevance — sharper word choices for fiction, poetry, and copywriting.
(v)
(transitive) To remove a veil from; to uncover; to reveal something hidden.
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(transitive) To reveal, uncover, make visible, bring to light, introduce (to).
To elicit, evoke, or emphasize (a particular quality).
(transitive) To uncover; to show and display that which was hidden.
(transitive) To expose, or reveal the true character of someone.
(transitive) To undo or open a lock or something locked by, for example, turning a key, or selecting a combination.
(transitive) To open or undo, as what is wrapped or folded.
(transitive, occasionally intransitive) To expose to the knowledge of others; to make known; state openly; reveal (something).
(transitive) To follow the trail of.
To make or become physically unobstructed, uncovered, etc.
(transitive) To travel somewhere in search of discovery.
(transitive) To encounter or discover something being searched for; to locate.
(transitive) To find or learn something for the first time.
(transitive) To make public or known; to communicate to the public; to tell (information, especially a secret) so that it may become generally known.
(transitive) To find out where something is located.
(transitive) To adapt into a different form; to give a new style or image to.
To discover or find by careful search, examination, or probing.
To ascertain definitely; to figure out, find out, or conclude by analyzing, calculating, or investigating.
(by extension) To make or become clear or easily understood; to explain or resolve in order to remove doubt or obscurity.
To start (an institution or organization).
(adj)
Naked, uncovered.
(transitive) To find out definitely; to discover or establish.
To acquire, or attempt to acquire knowledge or an ability to do something.
(transitive) To identify or locate (someone or something) precisely or with great accuracy.
(transitive) To establish the identity of someone or something.
(transitive) To see, find; to pick out, notice, locate, distinguish or identify.
To uncover or find; to bring out from concealment
(transitive) To make prominent; emphasize.
(transitive) To remove or take away, often in strips or stripes.
(transitive) To make temporarily or permanently blind.
(transitive) To display, to have somebody see (something).
(transitive) To dig out of the ground; to take out of a place of burial; to disinter.
(n)
(computing) An electronic screen that shows graphics or text.
(transitive) To remove a cloak or cover from; to deprive of a cloak or cover; to unmask; to reveal.
(adv)
Away from the inside or centre.
Communicated, signalled, or transmitted to many people, through radio waves or electronic means.
The overside or up-side of a flat object such as a table, or of a liquid.
(transitive, figurative) To clarify or make something understandable.
(transitive) To remove a shroud from; to uncover.
(transitive) To take out of a case or covering; to uncover.
(transitive) To remove the face or cover from; to unmask or expose.
(transitive) To remove a physical cap or cover from.
(transitive) To take a covering from, as the face; to uncover.
Now more specifically, a state of having few or no clothes on.
(transitive) To remove from a box.
To divest of a mantle; to uncover.
(transitive) To strip of drapery or clothing; to uncover or unveil.
(transitive) To divest or deprive of a cowl (monk's hood or hooded robe).
(transitive) To remove a mask from.
To reveal; to uncover
(transitive, rare, archaic) To cover completely, cover over; to cover up, conceal.
Obsolete spelling of unveil. [(transitive) To remove a veil from; to uncover; to reveal something hidden.]
(transitive) To bring out of hiding; to reveal or make public.
(transitive) To remove a curtain from; to reveal.
(obsolete) To uncover, to reveal.
(transitive) To let (dogs) out of a kennel.
(transitive) To remove the hood from.
(transitive) To remove a sheet or sheets from; to uncover.
(transitive) To divest of a shroud; to unveil.
(transitive, sometimes figurative) To reveal by removing a screen.
(transitive) To expose by removing the shield or protective shielding from.
(transitive) To remove the lid from.
(intransitive) (chiefly UK, informal, figuratively) To reveal or expose something, especially information. [with on or off]
A hard external covering of an animal.
To unwrap or disentangle.
(transitive) To remove from a package.
To remove swaddling, to unwrap.
To remove a disguise.
Obsolete form of reveal. [(transitive) To uncover; to show and display that which was hidden.]
To remove.
(idiomatic) To conceal or disguise.
To remove from a bag.
(transitive) To remove a blindfold from.
(transitive and intransitive, idiomatic) To conclude or finish completely.
(transitive) To strip of clothes or covering; to make naked.
(transitive) To hide or remove from a display.
A long outer garment worn over the shoulders covering the back; a cape, often with a hood.
(transitive) To remove (an outer layer or covering, such as clothing).
To terminate the involvement of.
(transitive) To lay bare; to expose.
(transitive) To remove a clamp from.
To remove the packaging or casing from.
The shell or husk, especially of grains (e.g. corn/maize) or nuts (e.g. walnuts).
(transitive) To remove something from a relatively hidden location or position where it is tucked.
(transitive) To remove a bandage from.
(by extension) To reveal; to unmask or unveil.
(intransitive) To leave the ground and ascend into the air or into flight.
(transitive) To free from fastening or from restraint; to let loose; to unbind.
A cover, or partial cover, for the face, used for disguise or protection.
(transitive) To remove a shade from.
(idiomatic) To uncover (a secret or scandal).
To release something by removing a clip.
Alternative form of unhele. [(obsolete) To uncover, to reveal.]
(transitive) To remove part of (something) by scooping or digging it out.
To the furthest or most extreme extent; absolute, complete, total, unconditional.
To remove a roof from, e.g. a building.