unˈgrudging, ppl. a.
(un-1 10.)
| 1768–74 Tucker Lt. Nat. (1834) II. 218 Such perfect ungrudging resistance both of pleasure and pain..being impracticable. 1823 Lamb Elia 1. Decay of Beggars, Cheap monument of no ungrudging hand. 1890 Science-Gossip XXVI. 178/2 The provisions gathered by their sisters with ungrudging generosity. |
Hence unˈgrudgingness.
| 1885 J. Martineau Types Ethic. Th. I. i. 58 Plato speaks of the world as the product of the divine ungrudgingness. |