unsifted
English
Etymology
Adjective
unsifted (not comparable)
- Not having been sifted.
- If you bake with unsifted flour you don't know how much you are using because it might be packed down or very fluffy.
- (archaic, figuratively) Inexperienced; untried, unscrutinized.
- c. 1600, William Shakespeare, Hamlet, Act I, Scene 3,
- […] You speak like a green girl,
- Unsifted in such perilous circumstance.
- 1765, George Colman, The Comedies of Terence, Translated into Familiar Blank Verse, London: T. Becket & P. A. De Hondt, 2nd edition, 1768, Volume I, Preface, p. xxxii,
- But each man’s understanding, such as it is, must be his guide; and he, who has not courage to make a free use of it, but obtrudes the opinions of others, unsifted and unexamined, on his readers, betrays more want of respect for their understanding, than diffidence of his own.
- c. 1600, William Shakespeare, Hamlet, Act I, Scene 3,
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