ppl. a. (UN-1 8 b. Cf. MDu. ongecloven, MSw. oclyffvin, Sw. oklufven.)
1620. Fletcher, Chances, II. i. My skulls uncloven yet, let me but kill.
1725. Fam. Dict., s.v. Animal, There are those that are cloven-footed; as black Cattle; or uncloven, as Horses.
1842. Borrow, Bible in Spain, v. They will not partake of the beast of the uncloven foot.
1893. Swinburne, Stud. Prose & Poetry (1894), 290. A sea uncloven by the share or by the prow of an adventurer in verse.