ppl. a. (UN-1 8.)
1646. Hammond, Tracts, 27. Any such act of sin unretracted by repentance.
1697. Collier, Ess. Mor. Subj., II. 66. Malevolence shewn in a single Outrage unretracted.
1739. Wks. Learned, I. 73. Content to leave the Calumnies of Fatalism and Spinozism unretracted.
1834. Mackintosh, Revolution of 1688, ix. 257. To consider the silence of the King as a virtual assent to their unretracted condition.
1855. Milman, Lat. Chr., XIV. iv. VI. 502. The monkish Latin satire maintained its unretracted protest against the Church.