inchaste
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From in- + chaste. Doublet of incest.
Adjective
[edit]inchaste (comparative more inchaste, superlative most inchaste)
- (rare) Unchaste.
- 1888, George Peele, The Works of George Peele, Volume 2[1], page 53:
- Now you that were my father's concubines,
Liquor to his inchaste and lustful fire,
Have seen his honour shaken in his house,
Which I possess in sight of all the world ;
- 2016, Wynn Wheldon, Kicking the Bar[3]:
- The inchaste mass of humanity left over is outside moral judgment – and no simple opinion will fit the structure of defeat.
Galician
[edit]Verb
[edit]inchaste
Portuguese
[edit]Verb
[edit]inchaste