unhurt









unhurt


verb (used with object), hurt, hurt·ing.

  1. to cause bodily injury to; injure: He was badly hurt in the accident.
  2. to cause bodily pain to or in: The wound still hurts him.
  3. to damage or decrease the efficiency of (a material object) by striking, rough use, improper care, etc.: Moths can’t hurt this suit because it’s mothproof. Dirty oil can hurt a car’s engine.
  4. to affect adversely; harm: to hurt one’s reputation; It wouldn’t hurt the lawn if you watered it more often.
  5. to cause mental pain to; offend or grieve: She hurt his feelings by not asking him to the party.

verb (used without object), hurt, hurt·ing.

  1. to feel or suffer bodily or mental pain or distress: My back still hurts.
  2. to cause bodily or mental pain or distress: The blow to his pride hurt most.
  3. to cause injury, damage, or harm.
  4. to suffer want or need.

noun

  1. a blow that inflicts a wound; bodily injury or the cause of such injury.
  2. injury, damage, or harm.
  3. the cause of mental pain or offense, as an insult.
  4. Heraldry. a rounded azure.

adjective

  1. physically injured: The hurt child was taken to the hospital.
  2. offended; unfavorably affected: hurt pride.
  3. suggesting that one has been offended or is suffering in mind: Take that hurt look off your face!
  4. damaged: hurt merchandise.

adjective

  1. not having sustained any injury

verb hurts, hurting or hurt

  1. to cause physical pain to (someone or something)
  2. to cause emotional pain or distress to (someone)
  3. to produce a painful sensation in (someone)the bruise hurts
  4. (intr) informal to feel pain

noun

  1. physical, moral, or mental pain or suffering
  2. a wound, cut, or sore
  3. damage or injury; harm

adjective

  1. injured or pained physically or emotionallya hurt knee; a hurt look

noun

  1. Southern English dialect another name for whortleberry

v.c.1200, “to injure, wound” (the body, feelings, reputation, etc.), also “to stumble (into), bump into; charge against, rush, crash into; knock (things) together,” from Old French hurter “to ram, strike, collide,” perhaps from Frankish *hurt “ram” (cf. Middle High German hurten “run at, collide,” Old Norse hrutr “ram”). The English usage is as old as the French, and perhaps there was a native Old English *hyrtan, but it has not been recorded. Meaning “to be a source of pain” (of a body part) is from 1850. To hurt (one’s) feelings attested by 1779. Sense of “knock” died out 17c., but cf. hurtle. Other Germanic languages tend to use their form of English scathe in this sense (cf. Danish skade, Swedish skada, German schaden, Dutch schaden). n.c.1200, “a wound, an injury;” also “sorrow, lovesickness,” from hurt (v.). see not hurt a fly.

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