unsolaced
English
editEtymology
editAdjective
editunsolaced (comparative more unsolaced, superlative most unsolaced)
- Not solaced.
- 1873, Thomas Webster, Woman: Man's Equal[1]:
- Thus studying, teaching, and planning; laboring with her hands, and enduring pain, sickness, and sorrow; unsolaced by Christian society, except her husband's,--three anxious years passed.
- 1921, Margaret Rebecca Piper, Wild Wings[2]:
- He was unsolaced either by candy or smoke and looked tired and not particularly happy.