English
Etymology
From un- + beckoned.
Adjective
unbeckoned (not comparable)
- Without having been beckoned.
2007 June 10, Michael Powell, “New York: Yours, Mine and Theirs”, in New York Times[1]:It’s not that Mr. Foner harbors no worry about an attack; his mind can wander unbeckoned to such horrors as a terrorist bomb exploding in the Lincoln Tunnel.