From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishunscathedun‧scathed /ʌnˈskeɪðd/ adjective [not before noun] INJURE#not injured or harmed by somethingescape/emerge unscathed He escaped unscathed from the accident. The government was relatively unscathed by the scandal.
Examples from the Corpus
unscathed• Most of the passengers escaped from the plane unscathed.• The bullet grazed the side of his head, leaving him virtually unscathed.• But Webb was perfectly confident that he could plunge into this fury and emerge unscathed.• The forefoot showed excessive wear while the heel remained relatively unscathed.• The burnished copper shone bravely, having only the previous night survived unscathed a particularly concerted attack upon its person.• The markets and older residential areas of the city were equally unscathed by modern trends.• The government was relatively unscathed by scandals at Lloyd's, the collapse of Johnson Matthey, and the Guinness saga.• Few retailers were left unscathed by the recession.• The Dow Jones Industrial Average remained relatively unscathed during the last six months, attracting more positive money flow.• It is true that Jacob will emerge more than just unscathed from the danger that fills his mind as he returns home.relatively unscathed• I breezed through college relatively unscathed.• Most significant for Ipswich, though, is that they seem to have come out of their winter blip relatively unscathed.• The forefoot showed excessive wear while the heel remained relatively unscathed.• The government was relatively unscathed by scandals at Lloyd's, the collapse of Johnson Matthey, and the Guinness saga.• The Dow Jones Industrial Average remained relatively unscathed during the last six months, attracting more positive money flow.• Much has been made of the fact that San Francisco emerged relatively unscathed from Loma Prieta.• Byrne dragged Stephen's body to a relatively unscathed section while Hunt went in search of help.Origin unscathed (1300-1400) scathe; → SCATHING