Antonyms for laid open


Grammar : Adj, verb
Spell : ley
Phonetic Transcription : leɪ


Definition of laid open

Origin :
  • Old English lecgan "to place on the ground (or other surface)," also "put down (often by striking)," from Proto-Germanic *lagjanan (cf. Old Saxon leggian, Old Norse leggja, Old Frisian ledza, Middle Dutch legghan, Dutch leggen, Old High German lecken, German legen, Gothic lagjan "to lay, put, place"), causative of lie (v.2). As a noun, from 1550s, "act of laying." Meaning "way in which something is laid" (e.g. lay of the land) first recorded 1819.
  • Meaning "have sex with" first recorded 1934, in U.S. slang, probably from sense of "deposit" (which was in Old English, as in lay an egg, lay a bet, etc.), perhaps reinforced by to lie with, a phrase frequently met in the Bible. The noun meaning "woman available for sexual intercourse" is attested from 1930, but there are suggestions of it in stage puns from as far back as 1767. To lay for (someone) "await a chance at revenge" is from late 15c.; lay low "stay inconspicuous" is from 1839. To lay (someone) low preserves the secondary Old English sense.
  • As in exposed : adj in danger
  • As in tell : verb communicate
  • As in uncover : verb reveal, disclose
  • As in unveil : verb reveal
  • As in venture : verb take a chance
  • As in unclothe : verb reveal
  • As in come out with : verb disclose information
  • As in cut : verb sever, chop with sharp instrument; incise
  • As in dissect : verb cut up; take apart
  • As in endanger : verb put in jeopardy
  • As in expose : verb reveal
  • As in expose : verb subject to danger
Example sentences :
  • I had laid open the deepest in me to her honest gaze, and she had read it, and could not but know me.
  • Extract from : « Wilfrid Cumbermede » by George MacDonald
  • In less than a minute they had laid open a gap: and with that the mystery was clear.
  • Extract from : « Two Sides of the Face » by Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch
  • He had laid open his mole-run for a yard or so, and was still grubbing at it absorbedly.
  • Extract from : « Dream Days » by Kenneth Grahame
  • I dragged him on the beach; with my knife I laid open his entrails.
  • Extract from : « The Hunters' Feast » by Mayne Reid
  • He had just laid open the book when Roy rushed in from the wireless room.
  • Extract from : « The Secret Wireless » by Lewis E. Theiss
  • To such a veritable 'Thomas' in petticoats every road should be laid open.
  • Extract from : « April's Lady » by Margaret Wolfe Hungerford
  • Our public wounds cannot be concealed; to be cured, they must be laid open.
  • Extract from : « Thoughts on the Present Discontents » by Edmund Burke
  • It looked as if Nate's skull would be laid open with the billet of wood.
  • Extract from : « Joyce's Investments » by Fannie E. Newberry
  • Why do they complain, that the West Indies are not laid open?
  • Extract from : « American Eloquence, Volume I. (of 4) » by Various
  • As with a merciless scalpel the inner heart of the man is laid open.
  • Extract from : « The Expositor's Bible: The Psalms, Vol. 1 » by A. Maclaren

Synonyms for laid open

Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019