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Definition of Disrober
1. n. One who, or that which, disrobes.
Definition of Disrober
1. Noun. One who, or that which, disrobes. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Disrober
1. one that disrobes [n -S] - See also: disrobes
Lexicographical Neighbors of Disrober
Literary usage of Disrober
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Dictionary of the English Language by Samuel Johnson, John Walker, Robert S. Jameson (1828)
"Irreverently ; uncivilly. To DISROBE, (dis-robe') ua To undress; to uncover ; to
strip. disrober, (dis-ro'-ber) nt One who strips offa garment. ..."
2. The Poetry of American Wit and Humor by R. L. Paget, Frederic Lawrence Knowles (1899)
"*~PHIS is old gold-stoled October, In its glowing, flowing gown; And its spirit,
blithe and sober, All the woodland's gay disrober, Turns the grasses gray ..."
3. The Toiling of Felix, and Other Poems by Henry Van Dyke (1900)
"Autumn is a rude disrober: Houseless, homeless in October, Whither now ?
Your plight is sober, Exiled king! Far to southward lie the regions Where my loyal ..."
4. The Cyclopedic Law Dictionary: Comprising the Terms and Phrases of American by Walter A. Shumaker, George Foster Longsdorf (1922)
"... ber, disrober). In old European law. To steal; to pilfer. Spelman. DEROGARE.
(Lat. from de, from, and rogare, ..."
5. The School Speaker and Reader by William De Witt Hyde (1900)
"Autumn is a rude disrober: Houseless, homeless in October, Whither now ?
Your plight is sober, Exiled king! Far to southward lie the regions Where my loyal ..."