ppl. a. (UN-1 8.)

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1646.  Hammond, Tracts, 27. Any such act of sin unretracted by repentance.

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1697.  Collier, Ess. Mor. Subj., II. 66. Malevolence shewn … in a single Outrage unretracted.

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1739.  Wks. Learned, I. 73. Content to leave the Calumnies of Fatalism and Spinozism unretracted.

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1834.  Mackintosh, Revolution of 1688, ix. 257. To consider the silence of the King as a virtual assent to their unretracted condition.

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1855.  Milman, Lat. Chr., XIV. iv. VI. 502. The monkish Latin satire maintained its unretracted protest against the Church.

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