a. (UN-1 7.)
1809. Coleridge, Friend, 155. The uninjurious and useful privileges of our English Nobility.
a. 1821. [see UNINJURED].
1866. Pusey, Mirac. Prayer, 32. A concentration of rain or its absence, uninjurious at other times, would ruin seed-time or harvest.
Hence Uninjuriousness.
1860. Pusey, Min. Proph., 374. Yea, ignorance and foolishness itself is cloked under the name of simplicity and uninjuriousness.