Wood On Words
Can’t get enough words about words with Sunday’s newspaper column? Then this blog’s for you, my word-craving friend. I work the late shift, so don’t look for responses until the next day.

Loosening up and unraveling a mystery

July 24th, 2008 at 07:00am Barry Wood

The prefix “un-” usually transforms the main word into its opposite. This generally holds true, from “unabashed” to “unzip.”

As pointed out in Mark Davidson’s “Right, Wrong, and Risky,” there are at least two common words that mean the same as their “un-” versions.

Once upon a time, “ravel” (rhymes with “travel”) meant “to make complicated or tangled,” but these days that’s considered rare. Now it’s the same as “unravel”: “untwist,” “untangle” or “make clear.”

Either one is acceptable, but “unravel” works better for me, because it’s all about undoing something.

However, in the case of “loosen” and “unloosen,” I choose “loosen.” Why? Because logically, “unloosen” seems to be saying “tighten up.”

Entry Filed under: word choices

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