ppl. a. (UN-1 8.)

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1526.  Customs of Pale, in Archæol. (1893), LIII. 373. The king’s iudicate officers … shall … suffer no accion to dep[ar]te unsentenced before them.

2

1612.  Two Noble K., V. i. 163. I could doombe neither; that which perish’d should Goe too’t unsentenc’d.

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1661.  Heylin, Hist. Ref., Q. Mary (1670), 6. The King … privately marryeth her within few days after his return, the divorce being yet unsentenced betwixt him and the Queen.

4

1822.  Beddoes, Brides’ Trag., IV. ii. Some vengeance will fall on us in the night If he remain unsentenced.

5

1862.  Shirley (J. Skelton), Nugæ Crit., 140. To leave them rather unsentenced and in hope to the mercy … which alone can fully extenuate … their guilt.

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1896.  Harper’s Mag., April, 672/2. The secular judge … forgot his duty, and Joan went to her death unsentenced.

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