ppl. a. (UN-1 and 5 b.)

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1661.  Feltham, Resolves (ed. 8), II. xxiii. 230. He catches at that which is not yet in his reach; which seems to unfold but an uncompacted mind.

2

1781.  Johnson, L. P., Lyttelton. Lord Lyttelton … had a slender uncompacted frame, and a meagre face.

3

1793.  W. Roberts, Looker-on, No. 36 (1794), II. 31. Democracies were all either loose and uncompacted, or violent and distorted.

4

1863.  Dana, Man. Geol., 49. Whether solid or uncompacted earth.

5