unmystical
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Adjective
[edit]unmystical (comparative more unmystical, superlative most unmystical)
- Not mystical.
- 1909, Robert Hugh Benson, The Necromancers[1]:
- It was the kind of atmosphere suggesting Nature in her most sensible mood, full-blooded, normal, perfectly fulfilling her own vocation; utterly unmystical, except by very subtle interpretation; unsuggestive, since she was already saying all that could be said, and following out every principle by which she lived to the furthest confine of its contents.
- 1921, George Bernard Shaw, Back to Methuselah[2]:
- With all his attention bent in this new direction, Darwin soon noticed that a good deal was occurring in an entirely unmystical and even unmeaning way of which the older speculative Deist-Evolutionists had taken little or no account.