Wiktionary
a. Not regarded
Usage examples of "unregarded".
Its circles, aye weeping and murmuring Mid her sad task of unregarded love, That to no smiles it might his speechless sadness move.
A gorgeous grave: through portals sculptured deep With imagery beautiful as dream We went, and left the shades which tend on sleep Over its unregarded gold to keep Their silent watch.
After very little inspection they were handed indifferently back, to lie unregarded on the spread cloth of the bales.
Her breath beating unregarded in her throat, she got up then, her hands taut, and looked down on his bent head.
It was the English, mauled and unregarded, of a person who spoke many languages and left them broken-hinged and crumbled like clams, solely attacked for the meat.
May had passed unregarded while George was still in his bed, drooping and ambitionless.
How like a man, to change from mask to mask like a player, concealing all intention, yet leave his heart out on the table, carelessly, unregarded, for all to behold.
That anon your newest ruin may lie crumbling unregarded, Like an old shrine forgotten in a forest of new trees.
Damon was an unregarded younger son and had never felt Serrais his home.
And Dezi, quiet and unregarded benind the wheeled chair, was like a paler reflection of Domenic.
And yet, when some burly protagonist would thrust himself too rudely into the ring, and try to bear down opposition by sheer vehemence of declamation, from the corner where he sat ensconced in unregarded silence, HE WOULD SUDDENLY SLING OUT SOME SHARP, SWIFT PEBBLE OF THOUGHT, which he had been slowly rounding, and smite with an aim so keen and true as rarely failed to bring down the boastful Anakim!
The next shot, by dividing the error, would go home, and the dust of the spliters and bullets would show on the peak, from which the tribesmen were firing, and it would become silent and deserted--the scene of an unregarded tragedy.
He was sitting unoccupied, as always now in the evenings, for his books gathered dust on the unregarded shelves.
Chapter 4 An extraordinary scene between Sophia and her aunt The lowing heifer and the bleating ewe, in herds and flocks, may ramble safe and unregarded through the pastures.
This compliment was so apparently directed to Jones, that we should have been sorry had he passed it by unregarded.