impiteous
English
Adjective
impiteous (comparative more impiteous, superlative most impiteous)
- (obsolete) Not showing pity or mercy.
- 1547, Arthur Kelton, A Chronycle with a Genealogie Declaryng That the Brittons and Welshemen are Linealiye Dyscended from Brute, London: Richard Grafton,
- 1623, William Shakespeare, Hamlet in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies, Act II, Scene 2 [Act IV, Scene 5],
- The Ocean (ouer-peering of his List)
- Eates not the Flats with more impittious haste
- Then young Laertes, in a Riotous head,
- Ore-beares your Officers,
- 1878, John Addington Symonds (translator), “Sonnet XXIII. The Modern Cupid” by Tommaso Campanella, in The Sonnets of Michael Angelo Buonarroti and Tommaso Campanella, London: Smith, Elder, p. 141,
- Through full three thousand years the world reveres
- Blind Love that bears the quiver and hath wings:
- Now too he’s deaf, and to the sufferings
- Of folk in anguish turns impiteous ears.
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