indigested

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English

Etymology

From in- +‎ digested.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˌɪndɪˈd͡ʒɛstɪd/

Adjective

indigested (comparative more indigested, superlative most indigested)

  1. (now rare) Not resolved; not regularly disposed and arranged; unmethodical, crude.
    • 1665, Robert South, Sermon preached at St. Mary's, Oxon, before the University, on Christmas-Day, 1665:
      This, like an indigested meteor, appeared and disappeared almost at the same time.
    • 1697, Virgil, “The Eighth Book of the Æneis”, in John Dryden, transl., The Works of Virgil: Containing His Pastorals, Georgics, and Æneis. , London: Jacob Tonson, , →OCLC, page 441, lines 252–255:
      See, from afar, yon Rock that mates the Sky, / About whoſe Feet ſuch Heaps of Rubbiſh lye: / Such indigeſted Ruin; bleak and bare, / How deſart now it ſtands, expos'd in Air!
    • 1720, [attributed to Jonathan Swift], The Right of Precedence between Phisicians and Civilians Enquir’d into, Dublin: for John Hyde , and Robert Owen , →OCLC, page 16:
      [A] Writers Stomach, Appetite, and Victuals, may be judg'd from his Method, Stile, and Subject, as certainly as if you were his Meſs-fellow, and ſat at Table with him. Hence we call a Subject dry, a Writer inſipid, Notions crude, and indigeſted, a Pamphlet empty or hungry, a Stile jejune, and many ſuch like Expreſſions, plainly alluding to the Diet of an Author, and I make no manner of doubt but Tully [i.e., Cicero] grounded that ſaying of Helluo Librorum upon the ſame Obſervation.
    • 1753, Joshua Reynolds, edited by John Ingamells and John Edgcumbe, The Letters of Sir Joshua Reynolds, Yale, published 2000, page 14:
      [T]hey were obliged to dispatch their Pictures as fast they could in order to receive the cash so that their first Pictures which were exposed and by which their reputation was to stand or fall were slight indigested and incorrect things[.]
    • 1780, Edmund Burke, Speech on Œconomical Reform:
      In hot reformations [] the whole is generally so crude, so harsh, and so indigested.
  2. Not digested in the stomach; undigested.
  3. (medicine, obsolete) Of wounds: not in a state suitable for healing; (specifically) of an abscess or its contents: not ripened or suppurated.