ppl. a. [UN-1 10.]

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  † 1.  Unceasing. Obs.1

2

c. 1380.  Wyclif, Sel. Wks., III. 52. Alle angels…, and alle powers in þis world,… crien bi vois and unstyntinge to þee.

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  2.  Ungrudging, lavish.

4

1845.  Herschel, Ess. (1857), 644. The spirit in which the demands of science have been met … has been … munificent and unstinting.

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1883.  W. E. Norris, No New Thing, xi. With so unstinting a hand had he ministered to the necessities of the poor.

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  Hence Unstintingly adv.

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1857.  Ruskin, Pol. Econ. Art, 200. All of these should be completely and unstintingly given.

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1885.  Agnes Clerke, Pop. Hist. Astron., 147. He poured his earnings unstintingly into his crucibles.

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