Free+from+enchantment
11disenchanting — dis·en·chant || ‚dɪsɪn tʃɑËnt v. free from enchantment; rid of illusion …
12disenchants — dis·en·chant || ‚dɪsɪn tʃɑËnt v. free from enchantment; rid of illusion …
13disenchant — dis•en•chant [[t]ˌdɪs ɛnˈtʃænt, ˈtʃɑnt[/t]] v. t. to rid of or free from enchantment, illusion, credulity, etc.; disillusion • Etymology: 1580–90; < MF dis en•chant′er, n. dis en•chant′ing, adj. dis en•chant′ing•ly, adv. dis en•chant′ment, n …
14disenchant — v.tr. free from enchantment; disillusion. Derivatives: disenchantingly adv. disenchantment n. Etymology: F deacutesenchanter (as DIS , ENCHANT) …
15dis´en|chant´ing|ly — dis|en|chant «DIHS ehn CHANT, CHAHNT», transitive verb. to free from enchantment or illusion; disillusion: »I thought that he would be charming, but I was disenchanted when I met him. The most deeply entrenched tyrant can be destroyed by aroused… …
16dis´en|chant´er — dis|en|chant «DIHS ehn CHANT, CHAHNT», transitive verb. to free from enchantment or illusion; disillusion: »I thought that he would be charming, but I was disenchanted when I met him. The most deeply entrenched tyrant can be destroyed by aroused… …
17dis´en|chant´ed|ly — dis|en|chant «DIHS ehn CHANT, CHAHNT», transitive verb. to free from enchantment or illusion; disillusion: »I thought that he would be charming, but I was disenchanted when I met him. The most deeply entrenched tyrant can be destroyed by aroused… …
18dis|en|chant — «DIHS ehn CHANT, CHAHNT», transitive verb. to free from enchantment or illusion; disillusion: »I thought that he would be charming, but I was disenchanted when I met him. The most deeply entrenched tyrant can be destroyed by aroused public… …
19Hayley Vaughan — Infobox soap character name = Hayley Vaughan Santos series = All My Children portrayer = Kelly Ripa first = November 22 1990 last = December 27 2002 cause = creator = Agnes Nixon Wisner Washam caption1 = Kelly Ripa as Hayley Vaughan caption2 =… …
20Europe, history of — Introduction history of European peoples and cultures from prehistoric times to the present. Europe is a more ambiguous term than most geographic expressions. Its etymology is doubtful, as is the physical extent of the area it designates.… …