To hide; conceal; keep secret.
The word "heal" is correct and usable in written English. It is usually used as a verb meaning to make or become sound or healthy again after an injury, illness, or difficult experience. Example sentence: The herbal steam bath helped to heal her cold symptoms.
But they didn't realise that Rudd would never give up, the wounds would never heal and he would never go away.
The confederation said in its statement that "the prognosis is excellent" for Neymar, but only if the injury is given the proper amount of time to heal.
The BICI team found that his jaw was broken "immediately after the arrest" which required "major surgery" to heal.
The likes of Forsyth will be looking to the prime minister to heal, and not exacerbate, wounds as he did when he played the English card after the Scottish independence referendum.
The charity's stunning gardens are a place of safety and serenity for veterans with post-traumatic stress who, through planting, digging, and weeding, can heal and make the transition to civilian life.
The Tory delight at the politics underlining his address will also do something to heal the ever-present tensions between the party and the Church of England.
They have left the party discredited in the public mind by its experience in government and disqualified, unless wounds heal, from reclaiming its pre-2010 role as a party of oppositional protest.
Being a terminologist, I care about word choice. Ludwig simply helps me pick the best words for any translation. Five stars!
Maria Pia Montoro
Terminologist and Q/A Analyst @ Translation Centre for the Bodies of the European Union