ppl. a. (UN-1 8.)

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1622.  Bacon, Holy War (1629), 103. In Peru, though they were unapparelled People, according to the Clime [etc.].

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1624.  Quarles, Job, Sect. xv. M j b. If e’re (alone) my lips did taste my bread,… Or bent my hand to do the Orphane wrong, Or saw him naked, vnapparell’d long.

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1656.  Heylin, Surv. France, 118. Most immodestly unapparelled.

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1872.  Calverley, Fly Leaves (1903), 93. All unapparell’d, barefoot all, She ran to that old ruin’d wall.

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1905.  F. Battershall, Bookbinding for Bibliophiles, I. ii. 18. If the book is in cloth, one will not (while the present standard lasts) have it bound at all, but will save it unappareled to be cast out by executors or next of kin; serving still, it is true, the general cause of bibliomania by enhancing the value of our neighbor’s copy, which then will be the only one extant.

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