Definition of "loosen"
loosen
verb
third-person singular simple present loosens, present participle loosening, simple past and past participle loosened
Quotations
In order to deal with deposits of soot on boiler-tubes while running, especially if poor coal is in use, locomotives are often now provided with blowers on the firebox back-plate which can be made to discharge a jet of high pressure steam towards the firebox tubeplates; this has the effect of loosening and blowing off the soot deposits.
1944 May and June, “The Why and the Wherefore: Locomotive Soot Blowers”, in Railway Magazine, page 194
(intransitive) To become unfastened or undone.
Quotations
Immediately my Shackles loosened and fell away of themselves […]
1770, Henry Brooke, The Fool of Quality, volume 5, Dublin, page 52
(transitive) To free from restraint; to set at liberty.
Quotations
[…] Valancourt, willing to take a more extensive view of the enchanting country, into which they were about to descend, than he could do from a carriage, loosened his dogs, and once more bounded with them along the banks of the road.
1794, Ann Ward Radcliffe, chapter 5, in The Mysteries of Udolpho, volume 1, London: G.G. and J. Robinson, page 145
(transitive) To relieve (the bowels) from constipation; to promote defecation.
Quotations
(intransitive, obsolete) To sail away (from the shore).
Quotations
[…] after the .iiii. day of oure arryuall in Britayne, the eightene shyps that we spake of before, which hadde the horsemen to conuey ouer, loosened from the further hauen with a soft wynd.
1565, Arthur Golding, transl., The Eyght Bookes of Caius Iulius Cæsar conteyning his martiall exploytes in the realme of Gallia and the countries bording vppon the same, London: William Seres, Book 4