untaught
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Middle English untauȝt; equivalent to un- + taught.
Adjective
[edit]untaught (comparative more untaught, superlative most untaught)
- Not taught; uneducated.
- c. 1515–1516, published 1568, John Skelton, Againſt venemous tongues enpoyſoned with ſclaunder and falſe detractions &c.:
- My ſcoles are not for unthriftes untaught,
For frantick faitours half mad and half ſtraught;
But my learning is of another degree
To taunt theim like liddrons, lewde as thei bee.
- My ſcoles are not for unthriftes untaught,
- 2005, Christine Alexander, Juliet McMaster, The Child Writer from Austen to Woolf, page 58:
- The gazing, the spying, and the ability to divine the eternal in the vivid manifestations of nature, here attributed to the young child, seem to be realised in this relatively untaught child of the woods of Oregon.
- c. 1515–1516, published 1568, John Skelton, Againſt venemous tongues enpoyſoned with ſclaunder and falſe detractions &c.:
- (not comparable) Not taught; not conveyed by means of instruction.
- 1937, Manly Wade Wellman, School for the Unspeakable:
- What they used to teach here
Now goes untaught.
Synonyms
[edit]- See also Thesaurus:ignorant