unpressing

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English

Etymology 1

From unpress +‎ -ing.

Verb

unpressing

  1. present participle and gerund of unpress

Etymology 2

From un- +‎ pressing.

Adjective

unpressing (comparative more unpressing, superlative most unpressing)

  1. (rare) Not pressing.
    • 1972, R Alec Mackenzie, “ The Telephone”, in The Time Trap: Managing Your Way Out, New York, N.Y.: AMACOM, →ISBN, page 95:
      The secretary who says merely, “Mr. Cooper is calling for Mr. Smith,” forces Mr. Smith’s secretary to interrupt his meeting to say that the boss wants him. This leaves Mr. Smith with little alternative but to take the call regardless of its importance. A more aware boss—or secretary—will anticipate this “upgrading” danger and make sure that an unpressing matter is simply conveyed by message through Mr. Smith’s secretary for response at a time convenient to him.
    • 1987, Ralph N Clough, “The Nonaligned Movement”, in Embattled Korea: The Rivalry for International Support, Boulder, Colo.; London: Westview Press, →ISBN, section 9 (Diplomatic Competition), page 291:
      In this contentious atmosphere, few countries wished to become involved in further argument on Korea, which for most of them was a remote and unpressing matter.
    • 2010, Don Coles, “Five”, in Where We Might Have Been, Montreal, Que.: Signal Editions, Véhicule Press, →ISBN, page 21:
      I rested on the stairstep beside him that day, he noticed my sack of just-bought English papers and asked if his friend Harold Hobson still ran The Sunday Times’ theatre pages, and within minutes we had clarified this and a few other unpressing matters and were holding glasses of very good old port in his book-lined, map-hung study.