Wiktionary
a. Not suspicious
WordNet
adj. not suspicious; "deceiving the unsuspecting public" [syn: unsuspecting]
Usage examples of "unsuspicious".
The mortal woman who only wanted to find her child would die in an unsuspicious way, and Char would let her conscience bedevil her after she had the city and the strigoi safe.
Edgar instantly discerned the continued unhappiness, which an assumed smile concealed from the unsuspicious Sir Hugh, and the week of delay before him seemed an outrage to all his wishes.
Berlinton, caught by her delight in the visit, though unsuspicious of its motive, invited her to renew it the next morning.
River Road gratefully and went at what he hoped was an unsuspicious march back towards the Thames.
Looking, then, at matters with a less unsuspicious eye than heretofore, he could not help observing that Arthur Wardlaw never put into the office letter-box a single letter for his sweetheart.
Maggie realized she could no longer put him off if she were to keep him unsuspicious for the next hour.
His unsuspicious hosts heard of the invitation with such outspoken pleasure that their honored guest could not well renew his protest.
In this way he obtained the disposal of considerable funds contributed by unsuspicious persons for ostensibly philanthropic purposes.
Bryson relied on the generally unsuspicious environment of hospitals and other medical establishments, and k37 he was not disappointed.
Ken, unsuspicious by nature, did not even look up as the two left his room.
Davidson, who is a man of courage, if ever there was one, that his psychology was not known to the world at large, and that to this particular lot of ruffians, who judged him by his appearance, he appeared an unsuspicious, inoffensive, soft creature, as he passed again through the room, his hands full of various objects and parcels destined for the sick boy.
Behind this the larger part of the Amalekite forces were lying in ambush, and as soon as the unsuspicious Ethiopians had marched past the hill, they threw themselves on the rear of the astonished invaders, while those in front turned upon them, and flung lances and arrows at the soldiers, of whom very few escaped.
Disguised as a Venetian nobleman, he proposed to sit for his portrait to that Antonella who first brought the secret from Flanders, and while Antonella worked with unsuspicious openness, Gian Bellini watched the process and stole the secret.
Base Observers and Executives, backed by the photorecords, show the explosions as taking place in the midst of the landing party as it returned, evidently unsuspicious, to the ship.
At the time Spikeman was rifling his house, and injuriously treating its inmates, the Knight, unsuspicious of harm, was lying in the wigwam of Sassacus, which was distant but a mile or two from his own residence.