Home › Words › D › disattachdisattachdisattach means to detach.Among words judged in Lexicurio's Arena, disattach ranks #35,565 of 42,747 for Qualifying.EtymologyFrom dis- + attach.verbTo detach.e.g.“A political result, we may also say aim, of the frumentarian plebiscite of Gaius was to disattach the city populace from its conservative moorings and to enlist it in the service of reform.” — 1909, George Willis Botsford, The Roman Assemblies from Their Origin to the End of the Republic:Definitions & examples from Wiktionary (CC BY-SA 3.0).Words closest in meaningBy meaning, not spelling — each word's AI semantic fingerprint, nearest first.detach 84% match — To take apart from; to take off. vs disattach →disattachment 83% match — The process of disattaching; the removal of something attached. vs disattach →deattach 82% match — Synonym of detach. vs disattach →deadhere 79% match — To detach (from) vs disattach →detachment 78% match — The action of detaching; separation. vs disattach →detached 77% match — Not physically attached; separated from something to which it could connect. vs disattach →detacher 76% match — One who or that which detaches. vs disattach →detether 74% match — To disconnect (something previously tethered). vs disattach →