unrecited

English

Etymology

From un- + recite + -ed

Adjective

unrecited (not comparable)

  1. Not recited
    • 1799, Thomas Warton, Comus,: A Mask: Presented at Ludlow Castle 1634, page 35:
      His Old Wiues Tale, which is unrecited by Wood, and of which the industrious Lang- baine appears to have known nothing more than the title, had sunk into total oblivion.
    • 1997, Diana Cavallo, A Bridge of Leaves: A Novel, →ISBN, page 174:
      The feeling would steal on me, too, as it still does, of the little I knew of all the dark, unrecited sufferings embedded so deeply in the lives about me.
    • 2005, James L. Rogers, The Complete Patent Kit, →ISBN, page 78:
      Each phrase defines the scope of your claim with respect to what unrecited additional components or steps, if any, are excluded from the scope of your claim.

Anagrams

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