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Unloaded   /ənlˈoʊdəd/  /ənlˈoʊdɪd/   Listen
Unloaded

adjective
1.
(of weapons) not charged with ammunition.



Unload

verb
1.
Leave or unload.  Synonyms: discharge, drop, drop off, put down, set down.  "Drop off the passengers at the hotel"
2.
Take the load off (a container or vehicle).  Synonyms: offload, unlade.  "Offload the van"



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"Unloaded" Quotes from Famous Books



... more than his enemy's outline But this was enough for a shot to do its work. Teddy cautiously brought his rifle to his shoulder, and lifted the hammer. Pointing it at the breast of his adversary, so as to be sure of his aim, he pulled the trigger, but there was no response. The gun either was unloaded, or had been injured by its rough usage. The dull click of the lock reached the ear of the target, who asked, in a ...
— The Lost Trail - I • Edward S. Ellis

... The big show was nearly over, yet many of the props used in the early part of the bill were still unloaded. ...
— Polly of the Circus • Margaret Mayo

... Lodging. Quoth Taj el Mulouk to Aziz, 'Is this the resort of the merchants?' 'Yes,' replied he; 'it is the khan in which I lodged when I was here before.' So they alighted there and making their beasts kneel down, unloaded them and laid up their goods in the warehouses. They abode four days, resting; at the end of which time, the Vizier proposed that they should hire a large house. To this they assented and hired a spacious house, fitted up for festivities, where they took up their abode, and ...
— The Book Of The Thousand Nights And One Night, Volume II • Anonymous

... goods, he planted a large field of corn on or near his own land, attended to it faithfully, and succeeded in raising a large crop, which he harvested, loaded into canoes and carried down the river to the mouth of Allen's Creek, then called by the Indians Gin-is-a-ga, where he unloaded it, built him a house, and lived with ...
— A Narrative of the Life of Mrs. Mary Jemison • James E. Seaver

... Alexander's practical mind more than legends or architecture. Huge stone buildings—warehouses, stores, exchange- and counting-houses—extended from the street to the edge of the water, where ships were unloaded and loaded from doors at the rear. Men of every nation and costume moved in that street; and for a day Mr. Cruger's business was in abeyance, while the boy from the quiet Island of St. Croix leaned against one of the heavy tamarind ...
— The Conqueror • Gertrude Franklin Atherton


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