a. (UN-1 7. Cf. G. unapologetisch.)
1834. Lytton, Pompeii, II. iv. With that sort of quiet and unapologetic air, which seemed to consider the right as a thing of course.
1868. W. R. Greg, Lit. & Soc. Judgm., 203. The unapologetic and as it were physiological coolness of his analysis.
1892. Swinburne, Stud. Prose & Poetry (1894), 236. The humorous little word of unapologetic apology.