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undesigned

ADJECTIVE
  1. not done or made or performed with purpose or intent

How To Use undesigned In A Sentence

  • Now it's reborn, in an apocalyptically apologetic and assertively undesigned designery sense. Times, Sunday Times
  • Italian sculpture on lowness of relief, by an incompleteness, which is surely not always undesigned, and which I suppose no one regrets, and trusts to the spectator to complete the half-emergent form. The Renaissance Studies in Art and Poetry
  • As I have already pointed out, he secures that ideality of expression which in Greek sculpture depends on a delicate system of abstraction, and in early Italian sculpture on lowness of relief, by an incompleteness, which is surely not always undesigned, and which, as I think, no one regrets, and trusts to the spectator to complete the half - emergent form. The Renaissance: studies in art and poetry
  • Free re-delivery is available within 7 days after the arrival of the cargo in case there is undesigned damage.
  • Indeed he had cunning enough to give me, undesignedly, a piece of instruction which taught me this caution; for he had said in conversation once, ‘That if a man could not make a woman in courtship own herself pleased with him, it was as much and oftentimes more to his purpose to make her angry with him.’ Clarissa Harlowe
  • Bishop then came undesignedly sidling in the direction of the sideboard. Little Dorrit
  • And as I had near opened the door, he threw himself on his knees to me against it, and undesignedly hurt my finger with the lock. Sir Charles Grandison
  • In England, however, see how different the case is: and designedly or undesignedly, the artist has opened to us a piece of his mind. George Cruikshank
  • So far they have yet to offer a real testable hypothesis, something that can actually distinguish designed objects from undesigned objects in the real world.
  • The interconnexion, the regularity, the order observable in phenomena are too great to be the result of chance or of the undesigned concurrence of a number of {44} independent agencies: and perhaps we may go on further to argue that this one cause must be the ultimate cause even of those events which are directly and immediately caused by our own wills. Philosophy and Religion Six Lectures Delivered at Cambridge
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