- unscathed
- adjective Date: 14th century wholly unharmed ; not injured
New Collegiate Dictionary. 2001.
New Collegiate Dictionary. 2001.
unscathed — index intact, inviolate, safe Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
unscathed — (adj.) late 14c., from UN (Cf. un ) (1) not + pp. of SCATHE (Cf. scathe). Mainly in Scottish before 19c. Cf. O.N. ostaðaðr, Swedish oskadad … Etymology dictionary
unscathed — [adj] not hurt in one piece*, safe, sound, unharmed, unhurt, uninjured, unmarked, unscarred, unscratched, untouched, whole; concept 314 Ant. harmed, hurt, injured … New thesaurus
unscathed — ► ADJECTIVE ▪ without suffering any injury, damage, or harm … English terms dictionary
unscathed — [unskāthd′] adj. [see SCATHE] not hurt; unharmed … English World dictionary
unscathed — adj. VERBS ▪ be, be left, come out (of sth), emerge, escape, get away, remain, return, survive, walk away ▪ … Collocations dictionary
unscathed — [[t]ʌnske͟ɪðd[/t]] ADJ GRADED: ADJ after v, v link ADJ If you are unscathed after a dangerous experience, you have not been injured or harmed by it. Tony emerged unscathed apart from a severely bruised finger... East Los Angeles was left… … English dictionary
unscathed — un|scathed [ʌnˈskeıðd] adj [not before noun] [Date: 1300 1400; Origin: scathe; SCATHING] not injured or harmed by something escape/emerge unscathed ▪ He escaped unscathed from the accident. ▪ The government was relatively unscathed by the scandal … Dictionary of contemporary English
unscathed — adj. to go unscathed * * * [ʌn skeɪðd] logo unscathed … Combinatory dictionary
unscathed — /un skaydhd /, adj. not scathed; unharmed; uninjured: She survived the accident unscathed. [1325 75; ME; see UN 1, SCATHED] Syn. unhurt, unscratched, untouched, safe, whole. * * * … Universalium
unscathed — adjective Not harmed or damaged in any way; untouched. He was quite relieved to finish the conversation unscathed. Ant: scathed … Wiktionary