English

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Etymology 1

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From Middle English unworth, unwurth, equivalent to un- +‎ worth.

Noun

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unworth (uncountable)

  1. Unworthiness; unworthliness; worthlessness.
    • 1850, Thomas Carlyle, Latter-Day Pamphlets[1]:
      Woe to the People that no longer venerates, as the emblem of God himself, the aspect of Human Worth; that no longer knows what human worth and unworth is!
    • 1917, Eugene Manlove Rhodes, Copper Streak Trail[2]:
      As the lawyer unfolded his plan the partner-clerk, as a devotee of cunning, found himself convicted of comparative unworth; with every sentence he deported himself less like Pelman the partner, shrank more and more to Joey the devil clerk.
    • 1989, Richard Paul Janaro, Thelma C. Altshuler, The art of being human: the humanities as a technique for living:
      Feeling a sense of unworth, we kill ourselves in a number of ways.

Adjective

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unworth (comparative more unworth, superlative most unworth)

  1. (obsolete) unworthy

Etymology 2

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From Middle English unworth, unwurth, from Old English unweorþ, unweorþe (unworthy, poor, mean, of low estate, worthless, contemptible, ignoble), equivalent to un- +‎ worth.

Adjective

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unworth (not comparable)

  1. (rare) Not worth; not deserving of.
    • 1894, Paul Leicester Ford, The Honorable Peter Stirling and What People Thought of Him[3]:
      This was rather pleasant, for she had to give Peter her hand, and so life became less unworth living to Peter.
    • 1916, John Lang, Jean Lang, Stories of the Border Marches[4]:
      That would be something not unworth boasting about--that he, a sort of eighteenth-century David, should slay this modern Goliath.