ppl. a. (UN-1 8.)

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1577.  trans. Bullinger’s Decades, 677. The selfe same sonne is, true God and man … abideing in two vnconfounded natures.

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1612.  W. Sclater, Ministers Portion, 36. Alienation of possessions … was flatly forbidden … that Christs linage and descent might bee kept vnconfounded.

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1676.  Boyle, in Phil. Trans., XI. 783. As if some odd subtile matter … interposed, to keep them unconfounded.

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1758.  Warburton, Div. Legat., IV. § 6, II. 414. The only place where they could remain, for so long a time, safe and unconfounded with the natives.

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1836.  I. Taylor, Phys. The. Another Life (1858), 113. Then does the mind hold each of these sets of signs … unconfounded and distinct.

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1856.  G. Wilson, Gateways Knowl. (1859), 50. Music forms the universal language which … the confusion of Babel left unconfounded.

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  Hence Unconfoundedly adv.

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1664.  H. More, Myst. Iniq., Apol. 525. Son, Lord, onely-begotten, acknowledged to be unconfoundedly, immutably, indivisibly and inseparably in two natures.

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