ppl. a. [UN-1 8.] Not clogged or hampered.
1563. Foxe, A. & M., 1046/2. That we may liue and kepe our consciences vnclogged.
1654. R. Whitlock, Ζωοτομια, 345. Ranging Licentiousnesse, which such Satyrists call Liberty, and unclogged Freedome.
a. 1721. Sheffield (Dk. Buckhm.), Wks. (1753), I. 312. Our minds uncloggd with farther care, Except to overcome or die.
1742. Richardson, Pamela, III. 356. The Wheels of Nature being uncloggd, new-oiled, as it were, and set right.
1839. De la Beche, Rep. Geol. Cornwall, etc., iv. 101. Thus leaving the subject unclogged by this kind of entanglement.