English

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Etymology

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From un- +‎ confess.

Verb

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unconfess (third-person singular simple present unconfesses, present participle unconfessing, simple past and past participle unconfessed)

  1. (rare, transitive, intransitive) To retract a confession.
    • 2011, Chip Martin, A School of London: A Trilogy, page 319:
      'It's no good trying to unconfess what three sessions of Auditing have uncovered. That boy is a devil.'
    • 2014, Shuen-fu Lin, Stephen Owen, The Vitality of the Lyric Voice, page 91:
      In the third couplet he confesses his destitution, says straightforwardly what he had said in the first couplet through the negations of irony; he confesses his utter destitution only to unconfess it in the final couplet.
    • 2021, Cate Quinn, Black Widows, page 363:
      Like there's no established ensemble for driving your son's widow home after she's confessed and then unconfessed to his murder.