a. [UN-1 7.]
1. (See LIQUID a. 1.)
1547. Boorde, Brev. Health, cxcvi. 68 b. Take gargarices lyquide and unliquyde.
1611. Cotgr., s.v. Pot, Small vessels wherein liquors, and sometimes vnliquid things, are kept.
2. (See LIQUID a. 6.)
1818. Colebrooke, Obligations, 195. Though evidently due, it is unliquid, so long as the precise amount of it is unascertained.
1865. Carlyle, Fredk. Gt., VI. vi. (1873), II. 188. [She] had left considerable properties; but all was rather in an unliquid state, not so much as her Will was to be had.