unframe

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

un- +‎ frame

Verb[edit]

unframe (third-person singular simple present unframes, present participle unframing, simple past and past participle unframed)

  1. To take apart or destroy; to unmake.
    • 1677, Alexander Carmichael, Believers Mortification of Sin by the Spirit, page 28:
      [] or in your converse with others, may be, ungodly persons, whereby casting off the sense of this, we often cast the honour of our profession to the ground, and by our sinful neglects or compliances, unframe our selves;
    • 1717, John Dryden [et al.], “Book 1”, in Ovid’s Metamorphoses in Fifteen Books. [], London: [] Jacob Tonson, [], →OCLC:
      A lifeless lump, unfashioned, and unframed, / Of jarring seeds
    • 1797, The Children's Miscellany, page 289:
      At their approach his heart alters its motion; his blood stops from its common course; his sinews are all relaxed, which entirely unframes his reason, and makes him a stranger to his own inclination, which, struggling with his wavering resolution, occasions a debate between hope and fear;
    • 1907, Kate Douglas Wiggin, Homespun Tales:
      All day Sunday to frame and unframe penitent speeches.
  2. To remove from a frame
    • 1940, Max White, Tiger Tiger, page 335:
      “We have only to unframe the picture,” he said. “ I remember that on the edge of the canvas there is a streak of paint, gray paint that went beyond the edge of the stretcher.”
    • 1983, The Artist - Volume 98, page 31:
      More than six or seven sketches were made of this subject before I did the finished drawing, and even now I find myself tempted to unframe it to go on working at it.
    • 2008, ICOM Committee for Conservation, 15th Triennial Conference, New Delhi, 22-26 September 2008, page 804:
      Do not unframe mechanically damaged paintings. Only unframe if glass front protection is splintered.
  3. To make HTML code that appears within a frameset accessible to browsers that do not support framesets.
    • 2000, Anamary Ehlen, HTML Complete, page 290:
      To prevent this from happening, it's important to unframe pages for external links or internal links to frameset documents. The easiest way to unframe pages is to use either the _blank or _top special targets discussed earlier.
  4. To show the innocence of one who has been framed.
    • 1965, J.W. Enrlich, A Life in my Hands, page 148:
      I decided to unframe the frame-up, to obtain Miss Holiday's acquittal, and to clearly document Mr. Levy's status and function in the case.
  5. To free one's viewpoint of its ideological or cultural frame of reference.
    • 1994, Women Studies Abstracts - Volume 23, Issues 1-4, page 65:
      One way to achieve this is to go beyond canonical representations of Miinter, to unframe her from the location within the modern confines of modernism, and thus to unframe her from victimhood.
    • 2006, Joanne Morra, Marquard Smith, Visual Culture: What is visual culture studies?, page 230:
      To unframe hierarchies of excellence and of universal value that privilege one strand of cultural production while committing every other mode to cultural oblivion, as claims the not fully articulated accusation in October, does not mean that one is launching an undifferentiated universalism in which everything is equal to everything else. Rather it opens up the possibilities for analyzing the politics that stand behind each particular relativist model and of differentiating between those rather than between the supposed value of objects and images.
    • 2021, Rani Rubdy, Ruanni Tupas, Mario Saraceni, Bloomsbury World Englishes Volume 2: Ideologies:
      In order to understand the contemporary ideological dynamics of World Englishes, we need to unframe particular understandings of Englishes which have mobilized past and recent work in the field (even as we further build on them).
    • 2022, Rose Montgomery-Whicher, The Phenomenology of Observation Drawing:
      Drawing renews wonder and unframes vision.

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