(ppl.) a. [UN-1 8 and 9.]

1

  † 1.  a. Unskilled, inexperienced, unfamiliar. Obs.

2

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.

3

1570.  Levins, Manip., 50. Vntraded, insolens.

4

  † b.  Not customary; unhackneyed. Obs.

5

1605.  Shaks., Tr. & Cr., IV. v. 178. By Mars his gauntlet thanks, Mocke not that I affect th’ vntraded Oath.

6

  † 2.  Not frequented, spec. for trade. Obs.

7

1600.  Hakluyt, Voy., III. 632. Our English that to steale the first blessing of an vntraded place, will perhaps secretly hasten thither.

8

1603.  H. Crosse, Vertues Commw. (1878), 44. Two waies are proposed,… the first is combersome, intricate, vntraded, ouergrowne.

9