unrecordedun‧re‧cord‧ed /ˌʌnrɪˈkɔːdɪd◂ $ -ɔːr-/ adjective

- Alas, the author of this historic remark is unrecorded.
- Clearly, many crimes go unrecorded, either because they are undiscovered, or because they are not reported to the police.
- Freedom from the restraining hand of a squire or a parson no doubt encouraged enterprise but it meant that much activity went unrecorded.
- Much of the research thus goes unrecorded in the standard bibliographies and data-bases.
- None the less, unofficial exports between neighbouring countries are likely to continue to increase, but to go largely unrecorded.
- On this battleground no act of bravery, no deed of chivalry, would go unrecorded.
- Selvon and Harris may have written in the freedom of knowing that they came from largely unrecorded backgrounds.
- The black economy refers to those unrecorded economic transactions conducted on a cash basis with a view to illegal evasion of tax.
► gone unrecorded
Many of the complaints have gone unrecorded. nounrecordrecorderrecordingadjectiverecorded ≠ unrecordedverbrecord