ppl. a. Also unin-. (UN-1 8.)

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1676.  Rector’s Bk., Clayworth (1910), 20. Such as had grounds still unenclosed.

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1712.  Blackmore, Creation, VII. 700. In the dark and undistinguish’d Space, Unfruitful, uninclos’d and wild of Face.

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1776.  Adam Smith, W. N., I. xi. 214. In waste and uninclosed lands, any person who discovers a tin mine, may mark out its limits.

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1809.  Pinkney, Trav. France, 67. Being situated in an unenclosed country.

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1867.  Latham, Black & White, p. ix. A country two-thirds of which are uninclosed.

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1898.  Taunton, Eng. Black Monks, I. 108. Unenclosed nuns doing God’s work in the world.

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