unminded

English

Etymology

un- + minded

Adjective

unminded (comparative more unminded, superlative most unminded)

  1. To which no attention is paid; ignored, unheeded.
    • (Can we date this quote?), Thomas Hardy, Far from the Madding Crowd:
      Bathsheba had too much sense to mind seriously what her servitors said about her; but too much womanly redundance of speech to leave alone what was said till it died the natural death of unminded things.
    • 1913, Charles Wharton Stork, The German Classics of The Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries,:
      Whatever, unknown or unminded by others, wanders by night through the labyrinth of the heart"--that he must transmit to the hearer; he must allow the listener to share with him the gift of "being able to give expression to his suffering."
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