unvalued
English
Etymology
Adjective
unvalued (comparative more unvalued, superlative most unvalued)
- Not having been valued or appraised.
- an unvalued estate
- Not considered to be of worth; deemed valueless.
- c. 1601, Shakespeare, Hamlet, I, iii
- For he himself is subject to his birth; / He may not, as unvalued persons do, / Carve for himself, for on his choice depends / The safety and health of this whole state, / And therefore must his choice be circumscribed / Unto the voice and yielding of that body / Whereof he is the head.
- c. 1601, Shakespeare, Hamlet, I, iii
- (obsolete) Having inestimable value; invaluable.
- 1595, Amoretti or Sonnets, Edmund Spenser
- 'Mongst which, there in a silver dish did lie Two golden apples of unvalued price; Far passing those which Hercules came by, Or those which Atalanta did entice.
- 1595, Amoretti or Sonnets, Edmund Spenser