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relieve
[ri-leev]
verb (used with object)
to ease or alleviate (pain, distress, anxiety, need, etc.).
Antonyms: intensifyto free from anxiety, fear, pain, etc.
to free from need, poverty, etc.
to bring effective aid to (a besieged town, military position, etc.).
to ease (a person) of any burden, wrong, or oppression, as by legal means.
to reduce (a pressure, load, weight, etc., on a device or object under stress).
to relieve the steam pressure; to relieve the stress on the supporting walls.
to make less tedious, unpleasant, or monotonous; break or vary the sameness of.
curtains to relieve the drabness of the room.
to bring into relief or prominence; heighten the effect of.
to release (one on duty) by coming as or providing a substitute or replacement.
Machinery.
to free (a closed space, as a tank, boiler, etc.) of more than a desirable pressure or vacuum.
to reduce (the pressure or vacuum in such a space) to a desirable level.
Baseball., to replace (a pitcher).
verb (used without object)
Baseball., to act as a relief pitcher.
He relieved in 52 games for the Pirates last season.
relieve
/ rɪˈliːv /
verb
to bring alleviation of (pain, distress, etc) to (someone)
to bring aid or assistance to (someone in need, a disaster area, etc)
to take over the duties or watch of (someone)
to bring aid or a relieving force to (a besieged town, city, etc)
to free (someone) from an obligation
to make (something) less unpleasant, arduous, or monotonous
to bring into relief or prominence, as by contrast
informal, (foll by of) to take from
the thief relieved him of his watch
to urinate or defecate
Other Word Forms
- relievable adjective
- relievedly adverb
- nonrelieving adjective
- quasi-relieved adjective
- unrelievable adjective
- unrelieved adjective
- unrelievedly adverb
- unrelieving adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of relieve1
Idioms and Phrases
to relieve oneself, to urinate or defecate.
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
The Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department has relieved three deputies of duty while it investigates the circumstances of the bloody beating of a Valencia man outside a Santa Clarita bar last year.
Stremberg, who supports the tunnel, said most people in town feel relieved there is momentum for a long-term fix, though they are frustrated that construction is still years away.
And with a fear of suffering racist abuse, James was also relieved to see other England players miss penalties in the quarter-final tie against Sweden after her own spot-kick was saved.
Ms Malone said she was relieved and gratified to know officers were challenging "archaic beliefs and questioning the integrity of those responsible for administering policy and procedure".
His accuser, actor Charlotte Arnould, said she was relieved the case was going to court, seven years after she filed a complaint.
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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