[UN-2 4.] trans. To deprive of seasoning or relish. In quots. fig.

1

1590.  Spenser, F. Q., To Sir W. Raleigh. Why doe I send this rusticke Madrigale, That may thy tunefull eare vnseason quite?

2

a. 1600[?].  Nobody & Someb., in Simpson, Sch. Shaks. (1878), I. 310. The remembrance that I was a king, Unseasons the content of povertie.

3

1728.  Theobald, Double Falshood, I. ii. What Fortune soever my Going shall encounter, cannot be good Fortune; What I part withal unseasons any other Goodness.

4