ppl. a. [UN-1 8 b.]
1. Not (yet) gone or departed. † To keep ungone (Sc.), to keep from going.
c. 1475. Rauf Coilȝear, 661. Ȝit was the King in the hall, And mony gude man with all, Vngane to the meit.
1597. in Archpriest Controv. (Camden), I. 2. Mr. Gwyn tould me that fissher was vngone at his comyng from London.
1638. Sir E. Stanhope, in Straffords Lett. (1739), II. 232. A Letter to intreat me to meet him the next Day, and if he were ungone, to bring my Son John with me.
1657. Rec. Burgh Lanark (1893), 160. To keip their prenteissis, servands, and childrin ungone avaiging on the Lordes day.
182477. in dialect glossaries (Yks., Linc.).
† 2. Untraversed. Obs.0
1611. Florio, Inuio sentiere, an vngone, vntroden or vncouth path.