(ppl.) a. [UN-1 8 and 9.]
† 1. a. Unskilled, inexperienced, unfamiliar. Obs.
1542. Udall, Erasm. Apoph., 172. No manne beeyng untraded in philosophie is an apte persone to bee a kyng. Ibid. (1548), Erasm. Par. Luke i. 7. A people not vtterly vntraded or vnentred in his discipline.
1570. Levins, Manip., 50. Vntraded, insolens.
† b. Not customary; unhackneyed. Obs.
1605. Shaks., Tr. & Cr., IV. v. 178. By Mars his gauntlet thanks, Mocke not that I affect th vntraded Oath.
† 2. Not frequented, spec. for trade. Obs.
1600. Hakluyt, Voy., III. 632. Our English that to steale the first blessing of an vntraded place, will perhaps secretly hasten thither.
1603. H. Crosse, Vertues Commw. (1878), 44. Two waies are proposed, the first is combersome, intricate, vntraded, ouergrowne.