Inconditus, pe. cor. Ex In & Condompositum. Pli. iun. Out of order, or fashion, tude: wearish: vnbutled.Inconditus turbidusque clamor.Plin. iun.A confuse or troublous shout or crie.Inconditæ blanditiæ. Pli. Flattering gestures without grace or dexteritie.Incondita carmina.Liu.Songes without grace or measure.Incondita consuetudo dicendi.Cic.Corpora incondita. Lucan. Bodies vnburied.Inconditus fremitus. Plin. A confuse noise.Genus dicendi inconditum. Ci. A confuse kind of eloqnence, a wearish kind of eloquence.Inconditum ac pene ridiculum omne ius ciuile præter Romanum.Cic.Is disordered or confuse.Inconditus motus. Pli. A leaping: daunsing, or mouing without fashion or order.Orator inconditus. Ci. A confuse orator that ordreth not hys wordes wel and in good fashion.Incondita turba hominum.Liu.A confuse throng or cõpanye mixed together.Verbis inconditis sententiam aliquam efferre. Cicero. With wordes disordered to vtter a sentence.Ne sparsi & inconditi, sine ordine, sine signis, omnibus portis excurrerent obsistendo. Li. Inconditè pe. cor. Aduerb. Cic.Without fashion: without order: confusely.Rudis hæc inconditè fundit.Cic.Confusely.Inconditè & monstruosè aliquid cogitare.Cic.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
incondĭtus, a, um, adj.I. (Acc. to condo, I.) Not made, uncreated (post-class.): ne quid innatum et inconditum praeter solum deum crederemus, Tert. adv. Hermog. 18.—II. (Acc. to condo, II.) A.Not stored up: fructus, Col. 1, 5, 6; 3, 2, 1.—B.Without order, irregular, disordered, confused, unformed, uncouth, rude (the class. signif. of the word): inconditum non ordinate compositum, Paul. ex Fest. p. 107 Müll.: acies, with inordinata, Liv. 44, 39, 1; so, agmen, Tac. A. 2, 12: ordo ramorum, Plin. 16, 30, 53, 122: turbidusque clamor, Plin. Ep. 9, 13, 4: jus civile, Cic. de Or. 1, 44, 197: genus dicendi, id. Brut. 69, 242; cf.: dicendi consuetudo, id. de Or. 3, 44, 137: sententias inconditis verbis efferre, id. Or. 44, 150: carmina, artless, rude soldiers' songs, Liv. 4, 20, 2; cf.: ibi haec incondita solus ... jactabat, Verg. E. 2, 5: inter jocos militares, quos inconditos jaciunt, Liv. 5, 49, 7; 5, 47, 4; 4, 13, 4: si alicujus inconditi arripias dissipatam aliquam sententiam, Cic. Or. 70, 233: homines, i. e.
not accustomed to military fatigue
, Tac. H. 2, 16: urbanitas, in qua nihil inconditum possit deprehendi, Quint. 6, 3, 107; cf.: Syphax inconditae barbariae rex, Liv. 30, 28, 3: nova atque incondita libertas, id. 24, 24, 2.—C.Unburied: corpora, Luc. 6, 101: per patris cineres, qui inconditi sunt, Sen. Contr. 3 praef. 7.— Adv.: in-condĭtē, confusedly, Cic. Or. 3, 44; id. Div. 2, 71 al.; Gell. praef. 3; Spart. Carac. 2.