English

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Adjective

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unindeared (comparative more unindeared, superlative most unindeared)

  1. (obsolete) Alternative form of unendeared
    • 1760, The London Chronicle - Volume 8, page 101:
      Your youth flies unindeared: the satisfaction's which arise from honourable love are lost, irrecoverably lost; your prime of life shall pass without a mothers's feelings, or once knowing how tender 'tis to love the babe that milks you, as old Shakespeare says;
    • 1782, Wilmot: Or, the Pupil of Folly, page 86:
      I tell him, I believe it has been of advantage to him, for I think he seems cured of his passion for “The dear bought smiles of harlots, loveless, joyless, unindeared.”
    • 1815, Zeluca: or, Educated and Uneducated Woman, pages 135–136:
      And a long and interesting conversation ended without her charging her own failures on Marianne, though Marianne would not let her fix them on Wolsey, and with regret at having an engagement with Miss Cassilis, when she was unfitted for music, and the fallal of unindeared intercourse.