undivined

English

Etymology

un- + divined

Adjective

undivined (not comparable)

  1. Not divined.
    • 1910, Algernon Blackwood, The Human Chord:
      In the actual sounds of many of the Hebrew letters lies a singular power, unguessed by the majority, undivined especially, of course, by the mere scholar, but available for the pure in heart who may discover how to use their extraordinary values.
    • 1912, Charles Egbert Craddock, The Ordeal:
      He looked up at the sound of the swift step and the sudden stir, and for one instant their eyes met--an inscrutable look, fraught with an undivined meaning.
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