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disarmlate 14c., from Old French desarmer (11c.), from des- (see dis-) + armer "to arm" (see arm (v.)). The figurative sense is slightly earlier in English than the literal. Related: Disarmed; dis [..]
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disarmv. To deprive of weapons.
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disarm(v) remove offensive capability from(v) make less hostile; win over(v) take away the weapons from; render harmless
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disarmThe act of turning your security system off, so that it will no longer detect an alarm event. Dispatch:
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disarmThe act of turning your security system off, so that it will no longer detect an alarm event.
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disarmA disarmed stack is one which can move only onto friendly stacks; such a stack loses most of its melee strength. Disarming is the melee tactic of rendering an opponent's stack less useful by evac [..]
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disarm
(transitive) To deprive of arms; to take away the weapons of; to deprive of the means of attack or defense; to render defenseless.
(transitive) To deprive of the means or the disposition to harm; [..]
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