ppl. a. (UN-1 8.)
c. 1445. Pecock, Donet, 7. Scant vnouȝ oon leef schulde stonde vnprovid or colowrabily vnrebukid.
1547. Becon, in Certain Hom., P iv b. He woulde rather suffer death then to suffer whordom to be vnrebuked, euen in a King.
1697. C. Leslie, Snake in Grass (ed. 2), 107. Tho they have let no supposd contempt of their own Books go unrebuked.
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.
1870. Morris, Earthly Par., II. III. 401. All unrebuked he let her soft eyes claim Kindness from his.