unburden in English

verb
1
relieve (someone) of something that is causing anxiety or distress.
the need to unburden yourself to someone who will listen
verb

Use "unburden" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "unburden" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "unburden", or refer to the context using the word "unburden" in the English Dictionary.

1. Unburden your soul.

2. He'll unburden himself to anyone who'll listen.

3. When open the door unburden the secret.

4. The laibon now begins to unburden himself.

5. She needed to unburden herself to somebody.

6. Aileen began at once to unburden her feelings.

7. He had been feeling guilty and needed to unburden himself.

8. Nevertheless, I feel the need to unburden myself in print.

9. She longed for a sympathetic person to whom she could unburden herself.

10. Kindness and understanding will often draw a boy to unburden his conscience.

11. What made him unhappiest of all was that he had nowhere to unburden himself.

12. Somehow he had to unburden his soul to somebody, and it couldn't be to Laura.

13. It was as if Jack was preparing to unburden himself, to share his secrets with her.

14. Sometimes he would have liked to unburden himself to somebody, but his officers and men had their own problems.

15. George dropped his hands from his face, and very quickly realized that the young man was longing to unburden himself.

16. Something nagging at you? Guilt, shame weighing you down? You aren’t alone, and now you have the perfect opportunity to unburden yourself-anonymously at Raw Confessions.

17. Put that Bumf away and unburden your soul.” De Guingand laughed and Monty saw at once that he would get a first-class review of the present situation and the causes of it—with nothing held back

18. Burthen: 1 v weight down with a load Synonyms: burden , weight , weight down Antonyms: disburden , unburden take the burden off; remove the burden from Types: overburden load with excessive weight plumb weight with lead saddle load or burden; encumber Type of: charge fill or load to capacity n a variant of `burden' Type of: burden , load ,

19. From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English be Burdened with/by something to have a lot of problems because of a particular thing a company Burdened with debt → unburden → burden Examples from the Corpus be Burdened with/by something • The colliery is struggling to fulfil its contracts and is Burdened by £1.7 million in debts.