unenfeebled

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

un- +‎ enfeebled

Adjective[edit]

unenfeebled (comparative more unenfeebled, superlative most unenfeebled)

  1. Not enfeebled.
    • 1905, Oliver Elton, The Danish History, Books I-IX[1]:
      Signe did not hesitate to back up his words with like dissembling, and replied that it was natural that hands which dealt more in wounds than wools, and in battle than in tasks of the house should show the hardness that befitted their service; and that, unenfeebled with the pliable softness of women, they should not feel smooth to the touch of others.
    • 1915, Alice Henry, The Trade Union Woman[2]:
      Further, she would be more likely to bring to the bearing and rearing of her children a constitution unenfeebled by premature overwork and energies unsapped by its monotonous grind.