Unroll a tube of refrigerated breadstick dough and separate the rectangle pieces.
From the charlotteobserver.com
They quickly climb the nearest vertical surface to molt and unroll their wings.
From the foxnews.com
The rocks of the gorge display chutes of water that ripple and unroll like scarves.
From the washingtonpost.com
If your first rolls are not compact enough, carefully unroll and start again.
From the dallasnews.com
When feeding, these fins unroll and can help guide food into the rays'mouths.
From the heraldtribune.com
You unroll this thing and attach it to your iPad with magnets along the edge.
From the pogue.blogs.nytimes.com
In late afternoon we pitch our tent on the sandy bank and unroll our sleeping bags.
From the guardian.co.uk
Pick up the pastry, using a rolling pin, then unroll on to the baking sheet.
From the telegraph.co.uk
Center the rolling pin over the pie plate, then unroll, easing dough into pie plate.
From the kentucky.com
More examples
Unwind: reverse the winding or twisting of; "unwind a ball of yarn"
Unfurl: unroll, unfold, or spread out or be unrolled, unfolded, or spread out from a furled state; "unfurl a banner"
To straighten something that has been rolled, twisted or curled; To emerge, be revealed or become apparent; to unfold; (computing) To replace (a loop in a program) with a repetitive sequence of the individual instructions that the loop would carry out, sometimes used as an optimization
Vt. To replicate the body of a loop one or more times (while correspondingly reducing the number of iterations), to improve efficiency by reducing loop control overhead (but at the expense of increased code size).