Definitions

Sorry, no definitions found. Check out and contribute to the discussion of this word!

Etymologies

Sorry, no etymologies found.

Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word unscared.

Examples

  • But if I fall off it enough I will get unscared, right?

    and those of us with ravaged faces, lacking in the social graces-- truepenny 2008

  • Uber - well, now I can't claim to be completely unscared but this jsut gives it that piquancy

    [cymru] cyfriniol cenedl 2009

  • There were five little foxes who now came out of the bushes and huddled around their dead mother, nudging her with their puny snouts, whimpering, unscared an unmothered.

    Potato Mash Finnegan Flawnt 2009

  • There were five little foxes who now came out of the bushes and huddled around their dead mother, nudging her with their puny snouts, whimpering, unscared an unmothered.

    Potato Mash 2009

  • "It makes me unscared," she acknowledges, "but sometimes it just makes me feel like an unscared dead person."

    DROWNING ON DRY LAND 2008

  • But - mid-morning I interview a potential replacement for myself, and discover him to be extremely competent and deeply unscared.

    November 11th, 2005 dame_habonde 2005

  • A thoughtful, unscared scientist should be as blunt and clear as possible when explaining his theses.

    MBH and Partial Least Squares « Climate Audit 2006

  • Saint Jean, at length and at once to sweep the English from the height which they had maintained all day, and spite of all: unscared by the thunder of the artillery, which hurled death from the English line — the dark rolling column pressed on and up the hill.

    Vanity Fair 2006

  • He has been unscared by the howl, and he will be unelated by the shout. '

    Shirley, by Charlotte Bronte 2004

  • 'I will try; and instead of musing about remnants of shrouds, and fragments of coffins, and human bones and mould, I will fancy seals lying in the sunshine on solitary shores, where neither fisherman nor hunter ever come: of rock - crevices full of pearly eggs bedded in sea-weed; of unscared birds covering white sands in happy flocks.'

    Shirley, by Charlotte Bronte 2004

Comments

Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.