English edit

Etymology edit

un- +‎ reconcile

Verb edit

unreconcile (third-person singular simple present unreconciles, present participle unreconciling, simple past and past participle unreconciled)

  1. (transitive) To sever; to make no longer reconciled to each other.
    • 1872, Henry Norman Hudson, Shakespeare: His Life, Art, and Characters:
      Now, in the first place, the Poet did not mean we should reconcile our hearts to Bertram, but that he should not unreconcile them to Helena; nay, that her love should appear the nobler for the unworthiness of its object.
  2. (transitive, accounting) To undo the reconciliation of.
    • 2000, Applied Accounting for the Microcomputer User, page 76:
      To unreconcile the item, click on the tick. It will disappear and the item will be unreconciled. Remember that all reconciled amounts must be ticked off on the bank statement as reconciled.
    • 2015, Heather Smith, Xero For Dummies, page 224:
      To unreconcile the transaction, start at the main dashboard, click on the bank account and tab across to the list of account transactions. Find the transaction and drill down into it []