unkissed

unkissed

(ʌnˈkɪst)
adj
not kissed
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
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At the end of our path we found it, under the pines, a crystal- clear thing with lips unkissed by so much as a stray sunbeam.
He was leaving her now, unkissed, but white and indignant.
The last departing pink mist Of hope fades unkissed And I am still double ticking love That fails to come my way And as the inkless pen tells The sad story I am aware Of hollow laughter ringing Through rafters of despair.
His list of suggestions includes 'Verisimilitudinous', 'Unknown, Unkissed and Lost', 'Infectious Diseases in Cattle' and 'The Obscure Moon Lighting an Obscure World'.
Nothing is worse than going through life with our toes unkissed.
through the mythological founding of Buenos Aires the threshed soul of a city that, like an unkissed bride, reappears in Borges's shadow: Every language is revitalized by contact with a foreign one (by reading a foreign tongue?) to William Carlos Williams, that first Latino, in search of an American English to break with the Other he himself was, not from the evening "I" (no zealot like a convert), a plan of action under a national aegis so that a blue voice nourished with whispers, I've known rivers: Ancient dusky rivers.
One puckers his lips, and her cheeks light up--for years, they've gone unkissed. Around us, neighbors pause over their gardening.
Be thanked, be embraced, Paul WE, WHO are true as the beach grass, In N've Avivim, the unkissed stone of a lament rushes up with fulfillment, it feels our mouths, it changes over to us, into us its whiteness enters, we pass ourselves on: to you and to me, the night, be on guard, the sand-mandated night, is exacting with us two.
At each, two or three cups of V8 remain, uncouth, unkissed.
She is fresh, tender, unkissed; and she is unable to bear children.