untinctured

English

Etymology

un- + tinctured

Adjective

untinctured (not comparable)

  1. (often figuratively) Not tinctured; not tainted or coloured (with or by something)
    • 1766, Tobias Smollett, Travels through France and Italy, Letter VII,
      It is no wonder that the heart of a female, unimproved by reason, and untinctured with natural good sense, should flutter at the sight of such a gaudy thing []
    • 1813, Jane Austen, Pride and Prejudice, Volume III, Chapter 2,
      [] two or three little circumstances occurred ere they parted, which, in her anxious interpretation, denoted a recollection of Jane, not untinctured by tenderness, and a wish of saying more that might lead to the mention of her, had he dared.
    • 1918, Lytton Strachey, "Florence Nightingale" in Eminent Victorians, New York: Garden City Publishing, p. 172,
      Perhaps out of England such an intimacy could hardly have existed—an intimacy so utterly untinctured not only by passion itself but by the suspicion of it.
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