ppl. a. [UN-1 8.]

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  † 1.  Free from discomfort or trouble. Obs. rare.

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c. 1450.  Life St. Cuthbert (Surtees), 6881. Þar was nane wery, alde ne ȝyng,… Þai come to Rypoun all vndyseesed.

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1535.  Coverdale, Dan. vi. 2. Aboue these he set thre prynces,… that the lordes might geue accomptes vnto them, and the kynge to be vndiseased.

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  2.  Not affected by or suffering from disease.

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1746.  Young, Nt. Th., IX. 1804. Where reason (un-diseas’d with you) runs mad, And nurses folly’s children as her own.

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1807.  Southey, Espriella’s Lett. (1803), II. 322. Undiseased parts will not convey any remarkable impression to the examiner.

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1879.  H. Spencer, Data of Ethics, xv. 277. Scientific knowledge of organic actions that are undiseased.

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