unˈdecency Now Obs. or rare.
[un-1 12 and 5 b: cf. undecent a.]
= indecency 1.
| 1589 Puttenham Eng. Poesie iii. xxiii. (Arb.) 271 Diuers points, in which the wise and learned men of times past haue noted much decency or vndecencie. 1656 Clarke Papers (Camden) III. 75 Upon a motion against blackpatches used by women on their faces, all undecency in apparrell was also moved again. 1692 South Serm. (1697) I. 482 From this springs the Notion of Decency or Undecency; that which becomes or mis-becomes. |
b. = indecency 1 b.
| 1624 Gataker Transubst. 189 It should be subject to many undecencies, as corruption, putrefaction, mice-eating. 1660 Jer. Taylor Worthy Commun. Introd. 5 A disproportionate instrument is an undecency, and makes the effect impossible. a 1716 South Serm. (1744) VII. 30 Every vacuity is (as it were) the hunger of the creation, both an undecency, and a torment. |