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Discover LudwigDisburden is a valid and usable word in written English
You can use it when you want to describe the relief of feeling free from a heavy load or responsibility. For example: The team felt disburdened when their hard work was finally rewarded with success.
Dictionary
disburden
verb
To rid of a burden; to free from a load carried; to unload.
synonyms
Exact(3)
The penitent wants to disburden herself, to get things off her chest.
On "a plain path to walk in towards promotion", Wolsey decided to "disburden" his young, pleasure-loving king of affairs of state.
He is asking his partner to disburden herself to forget that she's been wounded, to forget all the people who have let her down.
Similar(6)
Whether out of stoicism or hostility, we'd long since quit sharing personal stories up here, but during quiet hours, when all the others are sleeping and the toxins inflaming my veins won't let me rest, Sledge has been disburdening to me tales of collegiate mayhem in the Pacific Northwest, at Evergreen College.
I feel disburdened, I feel good, I feel like Samson awakening to the fact that the shackles have fallen from him, but the relief is necessarily tempered by a pang of nostalgia.
This entails a trip to Roosevelt Island: a buoyant one, aloft in the tram, as if the process of disburdening had already begun.
Having disburdened himself of that confession, Bertolucci now looks more paternalistically at the next generation.
Lady Susan herself, or her sixteen-year-old daughter, Frederica Morfydd Clarkk), of whom she prays to be disburdened by any means?
The prevailing trend of our time is, it seems, a disburdening of the past.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com