ppl. a. [UN-1 8.] Not allayed or mixed; unmixed, unqualified.

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1519.  Horman, Vulg., 165 b. He drynketh wyne vnalayed.

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1648.  Boyle, Seraph. Love, i. (1700), 2. Unallay’d satisfactions are joys too Heavenly to fall to many men’s shares on Earth.

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1682.  Norris, Hierocles, 90. Yet by the conjunction of good, he … at last enjoys pure and unallai’d pleasure with his vertue.

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1796.  Charlotte Smith, Marchmont, I. 46. Althea received this news with unallayed transport.

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1817.  Coleridge, Biogr. Lit., xx. II. 114. I can bring to my recollection three persons … who had read the poems … with more and more unallayed pleasure.

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1887.  Bowen, Æneid, V. 608. Deep her mighty designs, and her ancient wrath unallayed.

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  b.  Const. with or by.

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a. 1676.  Hale, Prim. Orig. Man., IV. viii. (1677), 375. By this means their enjoyments are sincere, unallayed with fears or suspitions.

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1751.  Smollett, Per. Pic., civ. The most elevated transports of joy, unallayed with the least mixture of grief.

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1762.  Falconer, Shipwr., II. 379. Where perils unallay’d by hope appear.

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1791.  Anna Seward, Lett. (1811), III. 199. A source of lasting happiness … unallayed by private or public calamity.

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