ppl. a. [UN-1 8.]

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  1.  Not physically moved or disturbed.

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1638.  Sir T. Herbert, Trav. (ed. 2), 128. Commonly the clouds here at Larr are undigested … and unagitated by the wind.

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1747.  Gentl. Mag., 523. The air stable, and the water unagitated.

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  2.  Not mentally disturbed; not stirred or excited by emotion or unrest.

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1772.  Test Filial Duty, II. 88. Unagitated by alternate hope and fear, the heart is quiet.

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1844.  Mem. Babylonian Princess, II. 257. The steady and unagitated trend of some seaman.

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1857.  Ruskin, Pol. Econ. Art, i. 34. What we mainly want, therefore, is a means of sufficient and unagitated employment.

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  Hence Unagitatedly adv.

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1894.  Mrs. Dyer, Man’s Keeping (1899), 64. There was a perceptible pause before he spoke again, during which Urquhart unagitatedly waited.

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