undrawn
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English
[edit]Etymology 1
[edit]Verb
[edit]undrawn
- past participle of undraw
Etymology 2
[edit]Adjective
[edit]undrawn (comparative more undrawn, superlative most undrawn)
- Not drawn (in various senses).
- 1808, Charles Lucas, The Abissinian Reformer; Or, The Bible and Sabre: A Novel:
- With my back to the main-mast, I parried the first blow with my undrawn weapon. The blade of the second was lifted to strike me, when his comrade perceived my defensive state, and struck it aside.
- 1900, Patents for Inventions: Abridgments of Specifications, page 75:
- This communication between the tank and pump is controlled by a float valve in the tanks and a cock in the pipe, while a poppet valve prevents the undrawn liquor going into the waste tank.
- 1923, Elizabeth Bowen, “The Shadowy Third”, in Encounters, page 153:
- Here the curtains were undrawn and they could see the lights twinkling out in the windows of the other houses.
- 2003, G. Rousseau, M. Gill, D. Haycock, Framing and Imagining Disease in Cultural History, page 6:
- The point of these distinctions is that the imagining of disease has much in common with imagining pictures, especially undrawn pictures in the mind.