Unhate vs Unhated - What's the difference?
unhate | unhated |
To leave off, cease, or desist from hating.
*1982 , Eric Wanner, Lila R. Gleitman, Language Acquisition :
*2004 , Robert Browning, Stefan Hawlin, Ian Robert James Jack, The Poetical Works of Robert Browning - Volume 9 - Page 317 :
*2008 , Anne Lamott, Grace (Eventually): Thoughts on Faith :
The lack, absence, or omission of hate; hatelessness; love.
*1951 , Kenneth Rexroth, Beyond the mountains - Page 71 :
*1993 , Shuaib Bin Hasan, Amer Rashid Sheikh, A passage to Pakistan - Page 85 :
As a verb unhate
is to leave off, cease, or desist from hating.As a noun unhate
is the lack, absence, or omission of hate; hatelessness; love.As an adjective unhated is
not hated.unhate
English
Etymology 1
From (verb).Verb
(unhat)- I hate you! And I'll never unhate you or nothing!
- Till when, All that was, is; and must forever be. Nor is it in me to unhate my hates, — [...]
- I learned how to unhate Bush the only way people ever really learn things—by doing.
Etymology 2
From (noun).Noun
(-)- Hold me. I am perishing. Achilles We can never perish. It is Unlove and unhate that give form To phantasms of time and space.
- [...] as Greene in his Our Man in Havana and other novels of power and glory, puzzled and worried, for other reasons than purely political or literary, why on earth should lt be easy to work up the politics of hate, but difficult to work out the politics of unhate .