ppl. a. [UN-1 8.]
1. That has not graduated; having no University degree.
1783. H. Walpole, Lett. to Earl Strafford, 12 Sept. I am glad at least that they have ungraduated assessors.
180212. Bentham, Ration. Judic. Evid. (1827), V. 120. Your learned brethren, and their ungraduated fellow-practisers, the barristers of the present time.
1867. Seebohm, Oxford Reformers, 6. Another Oxford Student, yet ungraduated in divinity, not even in deacons orders.
2. Not graded or regularly arranged.
1841. Myers, Cath. Th., III. § 4. 11. So ungraduated an estimate of Duty as this.
1899. Allbutts Syst. Med., VII. 363. These [limbs] being raised and set down in a brusque and characteristically ungraduated fashion.