ppl. a. (UN-1 8.)
1577. trans. Bullingers Decades, 677. The selfe same sonne is, true God and man abideing in two vnconfounded natures.
1612. W. Sclater, Ministers Portion, 36. Alienation of possessions was flatly forbidden that Christs linage and descent might bee kept vnconfounded.
1676. Boyle, in Phil. Trans., XI. 783. As if some odd subtile matter interposed, to keep them unconfounded.
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.
1836. I. Taylor, Phys. The. Another Life (1858), 113. Then does the mind hold each of these sets of signs unconfounded and distinct.
1856. G. Wilson, Gateways Knowl. (1859), 50. Music forms the universal language which the confusion of Babel left unconfounded.
Hence Unconfoundedly adv.
1664. H. More, Myst. Iniq., Apol. 525. Son, Lord, onely-begotten, acknowledged to be unconfoundedly, immutably, indivisibly and inseparably in two natures.