ppl. a. (UN-1 8.)
[1775. Ash.]
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.
1818. Monthly Rev., LXXXVII. 131. Mr. Koster observes that the cow-pox was extensively contagious among the uninoculated inhabitants.
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.
1898. P. Manson, Trop. Diseases, 151. Afterwards the originally healthy and uninoculated mice also succumbed.
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.