0 past simple and past participle of disarm
1 to take weapons away from someone, or to give up weapons or armies:
2 to make someone like you, especially when they had not expected to:
His frankness completely disarmed her.
In a situation of barter, we all accept to be disarmed.
This was particularly the case when the ' top ', in the form of the ' warlords ', were not disarmed.
The melody is disarmed of its narrative flow and reduced to a sound object - it becomes an instrument.
Since then conditions have reportedly much improved and most of the population has been disarmed.
Before it was clear, one way or the other, whether he would be released, he was disarmed.
Some favoured an organic, unified, and structured church, labelled ceremonies and governance ' indifferent ' and thereby disarmed the doctrinal objections of their opponents.
Over 50,000 combatants were disarmed before the government announced the official end to the country's armed conflict.
The local police sub-station was destroyed and the agents disarmed to prevent them from intervening.