a. [UN-1 7.]

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  1.  (See LIQUID a. 1.)

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1547.  Boorde, Brev. Health, cxcvi. 68 b. Take gargarices lyquide and unliquyde.

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1611.  Cotgr., s.v. Pot, Small vessels wherein … liquors, and sometimes vnliquid things, are kept.

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  2.  (See LIQUID a. 6.)

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1818.  Colebrooke, Obligations, 195. Though evidently due, it is unliquid, so long as the precise amount of it is unascertained.

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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.

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