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American Dictionary of the English Language

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Ravel


RAVEL, verb transitive rav'l.

1. To entangle; to entwist together; to make intricate; to involve; to perplex.

What glory's due to him that could divide such ravel'd inte'rests, has the knot unty'd?

2. To untwist; to unweave or unknot; to disentangle; as, to ravel out a twist; to ravel out a stocking.

Sleep, that knits up the ravel'd sleeve of care.

3. to hurry or run over in confusion. [Not in use.]

RAVEL, verb intransitive rav'l.

1. To fall into perplexity and confusion.

Till by their own perplexities involv'd, they ravel more, still less resolv'd.

2. To work in perplexities; to busy one's self with intricacies; to enter by winding and turning.

It will be needless to ravel far into the records of elder times.

The humor of raveling into all these mystical or entangled matters - produced infinite diputes.

3. To be unwoven.

[As far as my observation extends, ravel in the United States, is used only in the second sense above, viz. to unweave, to separate the texture of that which is woven or knit; so that ravel and unravel are with us always synonymous. etymology proves this to be the true sense of the word ravel ]