The Collaborative International Dictionary
Uncorrupt \Un`cor*rupt"\, a. Incorrupt.
Wiktionary
a. 1 Not corrupt; honest, fair. 2 (context archaic English) Not having decayed.
Usage examples of "uncorrupt".
The Hearthrall fires were small in the huge, high, thronged sanctuary-small, and yet for all their smallness distinct, cynosural, like uncorrupt courage.
A few devote themselves, rather like Zoroastrians, to keeping uncorrupt those religious observances that maintain a proper harmony between heaven and earth.
It was a place of evil grandeur, and at its heart, its ruler, was the dead Hitler, his body uncorrupting, his death a matter of conjecture, his terrible rule maintained by a myriad of servants in hopes of his rebirth.
But now I wonder if—at least in the manner of its rule—it is not much the same: Are we not also governed by the dead, by the uncorrupting laws they have made, laws whose outmoded concepts enforce a logical tyranny upon a populace that no longer meets their standards of morality?