ppl. a. [UN-1 8 b.]

1

  1.  Not (yet) gone or departed. † To keep ungone (Sc.), to keep from going.

2

c. 1475.  Rauf Coilȝear, 661. Ȝit was the King in the hall, And mony gude man with all, Vngane to the meit.

3

1597.  in Archpriest Controv. (Camden), I. 2. Mr. Gwyn tould me that fissher was vngone at his comyng from London.

4

1638.  Sir E. Stanhope, in Strafford’s 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.

5

1657.  Rec. Burgh Lanark (1893), 160. To keip their prenteissis, servands, and childrin ungone avaiging on the Lordes day.

6

1824–77.  in dialect glossaries (Yks., Linc.).

7

  † 2.  Untraversed. Obs.0

8

1611.  Florio, Inuio sentiere, an vngone, vntroden or vncouth path.

9