English

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Etymology

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From un- +‎ numeraled.

Adjective

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unnumeraled (not comparable)

  1. (rare) Not numeraled.
    • 1911, Frederic Stanley Dunn, “The Coins of Antoninus Pius. First Paper”, in Records of the Past, volume X, Washington, D.C.: Records of the Past Exploration Society, page 27:
      Since the obverse of these pieces in honor of Hadrian is the same as that of the PIETAS coins and of those with the unnumeraled reverses, the same date must unquestionably be assigned to all,—a period anterior to the death of Hadrian.
    • 1995, John Grisham, The Rainmaker, Island Books, →ISBN, page 302:
      The fifth member of Great Benefit’s legal team is Brandon Fuller Grone, pitifully unnumeraled and inexplicably uninitialed.
    • 1996, Josephine Jacobsen, “Atlantic City”, in What Goes without Saying (Johns Hopkins: Poetry and Fiction), Baltimore, Md., London: The Johns Hopkins University Press, →ISBN, page 115:
      It was war, terrible as an army with banners, and it had the nostalgia of finality; it was the last war, unique, unnumeraled.