ppl. a. (UN-1 8.)

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1641.  Milton, Ch. Govt., II. Concl. 62. A sort of formal outside men … whose unchast’nd and unwrought minds [were] never yet … subdu’d under the true lore of religion.

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1760–72.  H. Brooke, Fool of Qual. (1809), III. 136. He … has left his own household unchastened and unguided.

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1819.  Keats, Otho, I. ii. I blush to think of my unchasten’d tongue.

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1846.  Ruskin, Mod. Paint., II. III. x. § 6. In language coarse, in thought undisciplined, in all unchastened.

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1875.  Maine, Hist. Inst., i. 6. A school [of thought] almost infamous for the unchastened license of its speculations on history and philology.

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