ppl. a. (UN-1 8.)
1766. Smollett, Trav., xvii. His military power and unrestricted authority.
1785. H. Walpole, Mod. Gardening, Wks. 1798, II. 537. They extended their branches unrestricted.
1807. Wordsw., White Doe, IV. 60. Happy as others of her kind, That Range unrestricted as the wind.
1854. Röhner, Mus. Composition, III. 197. Unrestricted Canon is founded upon a melodic subject which [etc.].
1884. Contemp. Rev., Oct., 525. The unrestricted intermeddling of the State.
Hence Unrestrictedly adv.; -strictedness.
1844. W. H. Maxwell, Wand. Highl., I. 195. To him, every discovery is unrestrictedly unfolded.
1846. G. S. Faber, Lett. Tractar. Secess., 42. The unrestrictedness of his own liberty and power.
1861. Whyte-Melville, Good for Nothing, I. 293. A process that the weaker sex seldom leave unrestrictedly to their servants.