ppl. a. [UN-1 8.] Not clogged or hampered.

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1563.  Foxe, A. & M., 1046/2. That we may liue and kepe our consciences vnclogged.

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1654.  R. Whitlock, Ζωοτομια, 345. Ranging Licentiousnesse, which such Satyrists call Liberty, and unclogged Freedome.

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a. 1721.  Sheffield (Dk. Buckhm.), Wks. (1753), I. 312. Our minds unclogg’d with farther care, Except to overcome or die.

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1742.  Richardson, Pamela, III. 356. The Wheels of Nature being unclogg’d, new-oiled, as it were, and set right.

5

1839.  De la Beche, Rep. Geol. Cornwall, etc., iv. 101. Thus leaving the subject unclogged by this kind of entanglement.

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