ppl. a. (UN-1 8.)

1

c. 1445.  Pecock, Donet, 7. Scant vnouȝ oon leef schulde stonde vnprovid or colowrabily vnrebukid.

2

1547.  Becon, in Certain Hom., P iv b. He woulde rather suffer death … then to suffer whordom to be vnrebuked, euen in a King.

3

1697.  C. Leslie, Snake in Grass (ed. 2), 107. Tho’ they have let no suppos’d contempt of their own Books go unrebuked.

4

1857.  Susanna Winkworth, trans. Life Tauler, xvi. 306. When one finds this evil inclination in a man,… and he remains unrebuked, all this is the world.

5

1870.  Morris, Earthly Par., II. III. 401. All unrebuked he let her soft eyes claim Kindness from his.

6