unreflecting
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From un- + reflecting.
Adjective
[edit]unreflecting (comparative more unreflecting, superlative most unreflecting)
- Not giving reflection or thought to one's actions, words, conclusions, etc.; (of an action, statement, conclusion, etc.) done without reflection or thought. (of a person)
- Synonym: impulsive
- 1671, Samuel Parker, chapter 7, in A Defence and Continuation of the Ecclesiastical Politie[1], London: J. Martyn, page 569:
- Now what Discourse can be more suited to the Principles of these young Cubs of the Leviathan, than not to punish credulous and unreflecting People for being cheated and abused?
- 1770, Thomas Chatterton, The Auction[2], London: George Kearsly, page 22:
- When culprit reason truant plays,
And wanders forth in fancy’s maze,
Thy random shafts may please a-while,
And raise the unreflecting smile,
But soon as absent sense returns,
Our cheek with indignation burns,
- 1849 May – 1850 November, Charles Dickens, chapter 32, in The Personal History of David Copperfield, London: Bradbury & Evans, […], published 1850, →OCLC, page 326:
- If there are people so unreflecting or so cruel, as to make a jest of me, what is left for me to do but to make a jest of myself, them, and every thing?
- 1899, Joseph Conrad, “Heart of Darkness”, in Youth: A Narrative and Two Other Stories[3], Edinburgh: William Blackwood, published 1902, page 142:
- […] there he was gallantly, thoughtlessly alive, to all appearance indestructible solely by the virtue of his few years and of his unreflecting audacity.
- 1945, Evelyn Waugh, chapter 3, in Brideshead Revisited […], 3rd edition, London: Chapman & Hall, →OCLC, book 1 (Et in Arcadia Ego), page 56:
- How ungenerously in later life we disclaim the virtuous moods of our youth, living in retrospect long, summer days of unreflecting dissipation, Dresden figures of pastoral gaiety!
- That does not reflect light or sound.
- 1792, William Gilpin, “On Picturesque Beauty”, in Three Essays[4], London: R. Blamire, page 24:
- […] a mirror may have picturesque beauty; but it is only from it's reflections. In an unreflecting state, it is insipid.
- 1913, James Elroy Flecker, “A Ship, an Isle, a Sickle Moon”, in J. C. Squire, editor, The Collected Poems of James Elroy Flecker[5], New York: Doubleday, Page, published 1916, page 175:
- A star-ship—as the mirrors told—
Put forth its great and lonely light
To the unreflecting Ocean, Night.
- 1943, Graham Greene, The Ministry of Fear[6], London: Heinemann, published 1960, Book 1, Chapter 6, p. 99:
- The steel hat on the coffin lay blackened and unreflecting under the winter sun […]