† unconˈsiderate, a. Obs.
(un-1 7 and 5 b.)
| 1594 Daniel Cleopatra i. I vij, Thus much beguiled haue Poore vnconsiderat wights These momentary pleasures, fugitiue delights. 1612 Cotta (title), A Short Discouerie of the Vnobserued Dangers of seuerall sorts of ignorant and vnconsiderate Practisers of Physicke in England. |
Hence † unconˈsiderately adv.; -ness. Obs.
| 1570 T. Norton tr. Nowel's Catech. iii. 56 They that come rashly and vnconsiderately to prayer. 1611 Florio, Inconsideranza, vnconsideratenesse. 1621 G. Sandys Ovid's Met. iii. (1626) 56 [He] Admireth all;..And vnconsiderately himselfe desir'd. |