v. [UN-2 5.] trans. To take out of a charnel. Hence Uncharneled, Uncharnelled ppl. a.

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a. 1806.  H. K. White, Poems (1840), 116–7.

                                Then anon
Tell of uncharnel’d spectres, seen to glide
Along the lone wood’s unfrequented path,
Startling the ’nighted traveller.

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1817.  Byron, Manfred, II. iv. 82. Nemesis. Whom wouldst thou Uncharnel? Man. One without a tomb—call up Astarte.

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1831.  Trelawny, Adv. Younger Son, III. 232. More like corpses uncharnelled, than living men.

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