ppl. a. (UN-1 8.)

1

[1775.  Ash.]

2

1784.  J. Haygarth, Inq. Prev. Small-pox, 181. If any should persist in rejecting the good intended them, warn them, in strong terms, of the danger and criminality of wantonly catching infection from inoculated patients: indeed the most solicitous care will be taken that these shall not spread the distemper, unless their uninoculated neighbours shall be guilty of the most willful and blameable negligence.

3

1818.  Monthly Rev., LXXXVII. 131. Mr. Koster … observes that the cow-pox was extensively contagious … among the uninoculated inhabitants.

4

1855.  A. Haviland, Climate, Weather, & Disease, 98. It is calculated that the [plague in sheep] eologhií may carry off half the ἀνέκτρωτα, or uninoculated, and perhaps sixty per cent. of the inoculated may live.

5

1898.  P. Manson, Trop. Diseases, 151. Afterwards the originally healthy and uninoculated mice also succumbed.

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1917.  W. W. Keen, Med. Research & Human Welfare, 108. The percentage of cases of typhoid among the inoculated is, therefore, exceedingly small compared with the percentage of cases among the uninoculated.

7