ppl. a. [UN-1 8.]

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  1.  That has not graduated; having no University degree.

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1783.  H. Walpole, Lett. to Earl Strafford, 12 Sept. I am glad at least that they have ungraduated assessors.

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1802–12.  Bentham, Ration. Judic. Evid. (1827), V. 120. Your learned brethren, and their ungraduated fellow-practisers, the barristers of the present time.

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1867.  Seebohm, Oxford Reformers, 6. Another Oxford Student,… yet ungraduated in divinity, not even in deacon’s orders.

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  2.  Not graded or regularly arranged.

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1841.  Myers, Cath. Th., III. § 4. 11. So ungraduated an estimate of Duty as this.

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1899.  Allbutt’s Syst. Med., VII. 363. These [limbs] being … raised and set down in a brusque and characteristically ungraduated fashion.

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