ppl. a. (UN-1 8.)
1656. Osborne, Observ. Turks, 3. Such marks of Worship as he was pleased to impresse upon their yet unsuborned imaginations.
1689. Hickeringill, Ceremony-Monger, Concl. ii. The Legislative Power (unsubornd by Priest-craft).
1754. Hume, Hist. Eng., I. 467. The very pulpits were bedewed with unsuborned tears.
1797. Burke, Regic. Peace, iii. 30. Such a tone is the true, unsuborned, unsophisticated language of genuine natural feeling.