disconcert• She was not as disconcerted as she had expected to be.• Sometimes, she thought she disconcertedHawk with her love, but he kept apace with her.• Nothing was known to disconcert him, certainly not the death of a man he had disliked.• This new benignity and tolerance a little disconcerted him.
Origindisconcert
(1600-1700)Old Frenchdesconcerter, from concerter“to bring into agreement”