unclassic

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English

Etymology

From un- +‎ classic.

Adjective

unclassic (comparative more unclassic, superlative most unclassic)

  1. unclassical
    • 1897, Dorothy Quigley, What Dress Makes of Us:
      [] he has forsworn soft, trailing garments that conceal unclassic curves and uninspiring lines of nether limbs []
    • 1903, Gerald Stanley Lee, The Lost Art of Reading:
      The decorous and beautiful despising of one's self that the study of the classics has come to be as conducted under unclassic teachers, is a fact that speaks for itself.