Detach
21Detach Me from My Head — Studio album by Feeding Fingers Released September 28, 2010 …
22detach oneself from — leave or separate oneself from (a group or place). → detach …
23detach — transitive verb Etymology: French détacher, from Old French destachier, from des de + tachier (as in atachier to attach) Date: 1686 1. to separate especially from a larger mass and usually without violence or damage 2. disengage …
24detach — detachable, adj. detachability, n. detachably, adv. detacher, n. /di tach /, v.t. 1. to unfasten and separate; disengage; disunite. 2. Mil. to send away (a regiment, ship, etc.) on a special mission. [1470 80; < MF détacher …
25detach — verb /dɪˈtætʃ,dəˈtætʃ,dɪˈtætʃ/ To take apart from; to take off. Ant: attach …
26detach — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) v. t. separate, disconnect, remove, unfix, unfasten. See disjunction. Ant., attach. II (Roget s IV) v. Syn. separate, withdraw, disengage, disconnect; see divide 1 , unhitch . III (Roget s 3… …
27detach — de·tach || dɪ tætʃ v. remove, separate, disconnect; send away on a mission (Military) …
28detach — v. a. 1. Separate, disjoin, disengage, disunite, sever, dissever, part, divide. 2. Detail, send away, appoint to a special service …
29detach — v 1. unfasten, uncouple, disengage, disconnect, unfix, unhitch, disjoin, disunite; disentangle, loosen, free; separate, dissociate, abstract, cut off, isolate, segregate. 2.Military. send on a special mission, detail …
30detach — de·tach …