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T. UNMOʻULD. v. a. To change as to the form (Milton). UNMOURNED. a. Not lamented; not deplored (Southern).

To UNMUFFLE v. a. To put off a covering from the face (Milton)

UNMUSICAL. a. Not harmonious; not pleasing by sound (Ben Jonson).

To UNMUZZLE. v. a. To loose from a muzzle (Shakspeare).

UNNA'MED. a. Not mentioned (Mil

Lon).

UNNATURAL. a. 1. Contrary to the Jaws of nature; contrary to the common instincts (L'Estrange). 2. Acting without the affections implanted by nature (Denham). 3. Forced; not agreeable to the real state of persons or things (Addison).

UNNATURALLY. ad. In opposition to nature (Tillotson).

UNNATURALNESS. s. Contrariety to nature (Sidney).

UNNA'VIGABLE. a. Not to be passed by vessels; not to be navigated (Cowley). UNNECESSARILY. ad. Without necessity; without need; needlessly (Broome). UNNECESSARINESS. s. Needlessness (Decay of Piety.

UNNECESSARY a. Needless; not wanted; useless (Hooker).

UNNEIGHBOURLY. a. Not kind; not suitable to the duties of a neighbour (Garth).

UNNEIGHBOURLY, ad. In a manner not suitable to a neighbour; with malevolence; with mutual mischief (Shakspeare).

To UNNERVE. v. a. To weaken; to enfeeble (Addison).

UNNERVED. a Weak; feeble (Shak

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leigh).

UNOBJECTED. a. Not charged as a fault, or contrary to argument (Atterbury). UNOBNOXIOUS. a. Not liable; not opposed to any hurt (Donne). UNOBSEQUIOUSNESS. s. Incompliance; disobedience (Brown).

UNOBSERVABLE. a. Not to be observed; not discoverable (Boyle). UNOBSERVANT. a. 1. Not obsequious. 2. Not attentive (Glanville). UNOBSERVED. a. Not regarded; not attended to; not heeded (Atterbury). UNOBSERVING. a. Inattentive; not heedfui (Dryden). UNOBSTRUCTED. a. Not hindered; not stopped (Blackmore). UNOBSTRUCTIVE. a. Not raising any obstacle (Blackmore).

UNOBTAINED. a. Not gained; not ac quired (Hooker).

UNOBVIOUS. a. Not readily occurring. UNOCCUPIED a. Unpossessed (Grew). UNOFFENDING. a. 1. Harmless; innocent (Dryden). 2. Sinless; pure from fault (Rogers).

UNOFFERED. a. Not proposed to acceptance (Clarendon). To UNOIL. v. a. To free from oil (Dry

den).

UNONA, in botany, a genus of the class polyandria, order polygynia. Calyx three-leaved; petals six; berries two or three-seeded, beaded like a necklace. Four species, natives of the East or West Indies.

UNO PENING. a. Not opening (Pope). UNOPERATIVE. a. Producing no effects (South).. SONOPPOSED. a. Not encountered by any hostility or obstruction (Dryden). UNO'RDERLY, a. Disordered; irregular (Sanderson).

UNO'RDINARY. a. usual: not used (Locke).

Uncommon; un

UNORGANIZED. a. Having no parts instrumental to the motion or nourishment of the rest (Grew).

UNORIGINAL. UNORIGINATED. a. Having birth; ungenerated (Milton). UNORTHODOX. a. Not holding pure doctrine (Decay of Piety).

UNO'WED. a. Having no owner (Shakspeare).

UNOWNED. a. 1. Having no owner. 2. Not acknowledged; not claimed (Milton).

To UNPACK, v. a. 1. To disburden; to exonerate (Shakspeare). 2. To open any thing bound together (Boyle).

UNPACKED. a. Not collected by unlaw. ful artifices (Hudibras).

UNPAID. a a. 1. Not discharged (Milton). 2. Not having dues or debts (Pope). 3. UNPAID for. That for which the price is not yet given (Shakspeare).

UNPAINED. a. Suffering no pain (Mil

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UNPA'RTED. a. Undivided; not separated (Prior).

UNPARTIAL. a. Equal; honest (San

derson).

UNPARTIALLY. ad. Equally; indifferently (Hooker).

UNPA'SSABLE. a. 1. Admitting no passage (Watts). 2. Not current; not suffered to pass (Locke).

UNPASSIONATE. UNPA'SSIONATED. a. Free from passion; calm; impartial (Wotton. Glanville).

UNPASSIONATELY. ad. Without passion (King Charles).

UNPATHED. a. Untracked; unmarked by passage (Shakspeare).

UNPAWNED. a. Not given to pledge. To UNPA'Y. v. a. To undo (Shakspeare). UNPEACEABLE. a. Quarrelsome; inclined to disturb the tranquillity of others (Tillotson).

To UNPEG. v. a. To open any thing closed with a peg (Shakspeare). UNPE'NSIONED. a. Not kept in dependance by a pension (Pope).

To UNPEOPLE. v. a. To depopulate; to deprive of inhabitants (Addison).

UNPERCEIVED. a. Not observed; not heeded; not sensibly discovered; not known. UNPERCEIVEDLY. ad. So as not to be perceived (Boyle)

UNPERFECT. a. (imparfait, Fr. imperfectus, Lat.) Incomplete (Peacham). UNPERFECTNESS. s. Imperfection; incompleteness (Ascham).

UNPERFORMED. a. Undone; not done

(Taylor).

UNPERISHABLE. a. Lasting to perpetuity; exempt from decay (Hammond). UNPERPLEXED. & Disentangled ; not embarrassed (Locke).

UNPERSPIRABLE. a. Not to be emitted through the pores of the skin (Arbuthnot). UNPERSUADABLE. a. Inexorable; not to be persuaded (Sidney).

UNPETRIFIED. a. Not turned to stone

(Brown).

UNPHILOSOPHICAL. a.

Unsuitable to the rules of philosophy, or right reason (Collier).

UNPHILOSOPHICALLY. ad. In a manner contrary to the rules of right reason. UNPHILOSOPHICALNESS. s. Incongruity with philosophy (Norris). UNPIERCED. d. Not penetrated; not pierced (Gay).

UNPILLARED. a. Deprived of pillars

(Pope).

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speare).

UNPLEASANT. a. Not delighting; troublesome; uneasy (Woodward). UNPLEASANTLY. ad. Not delightfully; uneasily (Pope). Want of qua

UNPLEASANTNESS. s. lities to give delight (Hooker). UNPLEA'SED. a. Not pleased; not delighted (Shakspeare).

UNPLEA'SING. a. Offensive; disgusting; giving no delight (Milton).

UNPLIANT. a. Not easily bent; not conforming to the will (Wotton).

To UNPLU'ME. v. a. To strip of plumes; to degrade (Glanville).

UNPOETICAL. UNPOETIC. a. Not such as becomes a poet (Bishop Corbet).

UNPO'LISHED. a. 1. Not smoothed; not brightened by attrition (Stilling fleet). 2. Not civilized; not refined (Dryden).

UNPOLITE. a. (impoli, Fr. impolitus, Latin.) Not elegant; not refined; not civil (Watts).

UNPOLLUTED. a. (impollutus, Latin.) Not corrupted; not defiled (Milton).

UNPOPULAR. a. Not fitted to please the people (Addison).

UNPORTABLE. a. Not to be carried. UNPOSSESSED. a. Not had; not held; not enjoyed (Prior).

UNPOSSESSING. a. Having no posses sion (Shakspeare).

UNPRACTICABLE. a. Not feasible. UNPRACTISED. a. 1. Not skilful by use and experience (Milton). 2. Not known; not familiar by use (Prior).

UNPRECARIOUS. a. Not dependant on another (Blackmore).

UNPRECEDENTED. a. Not justifiable by any example (Swift).

To UNPREDICT. v. a. To retract prediction (Milton).

UNPREFERRED. u. Not advanced (Col

lier).

UNPREGNANT. a. quick of wit (Shakspeare).

Not prolific; not

UNPREJUDICATE. a. Not prepossessed!

PUPILLOWED. a. Wanting a pillow. by any settled notions (Taylor).

To UNPIN. v. a. To open what is shut, or fastened with a pin (Herbert).

UNPINKED. a. Not marked with eyelet holes (Shakspeare).

UNPITIED. a. Not compassionated; not regarded with sympathetical sorrow (RoscomPRON).

UNPITIFULLY.ad. Unmercifully; without mercy (Shakspeare).

UNPREJUDICED. a. Free from prejudice; void of preconceived notions (Tillotson). UNPRELA TICAL. a. Unsuitable to a prelate (Clarendon).

UNPREMEDITATED. a. Not prepared in the mind beforehand (Milton).

UNPREPARED. a. 1. Not fitted by previous measures (Milton). 2. Not made fit for the dreadful moment of departure (Shakspeare);

UNPREPAREDNESS. s. State of being unprepared (King Charles). UNPREPOSSESSED. a. Not prepossess ed; not preoccupied by notions (South). UNPRESSED. a. 1. Not pressed (Tickel). 2. Not enforced (Clarendon). UNPRETENDING. a. Not claiming any distinctions (Pope).

UNPREVAILING. a. Being of no force (Shakspeare).

UNPREVENTED. a. 1. Not previously hindered (Shakspeare). 2. Not preceded by any thing (Milton).

UNPRINCELY. a. Unsuitable to a prince. UNPRINCIPLED. a. Not settled in tenets or opinions (Milton).

UNPRI'SABLE. a. Not valued; not of estimation (Shakspeare).

UNPRISONED. a. Set free from confinement (Donne).

UNPRIZED. a. Not valued (Shakspeare). UNPROCLAIMED. a. Not notified by a public declaration (Milton).

UNPROFA'NED. a. Not violated (Dry

den).

UNPROFITABLE. a. Useless; serving no purpose (Hooker).

UNPROFITABLENESS. s. Uselessness

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den).

UNPUNISHED. a. (impunis, Fr.) N punished; suffered to continue in impunity (L'Estrange).

ham).

UNPURCHASED. a. Unbought (DenUNPURIFIED. a. 1. Not freed from recrement. 2. Not cleansed from sin (Decay of Piety).

UNPU TREFIED. a. Not corrupted by rottenness (Arbuthnot).

To UNQUALIFY. v. a. To disqualify; to divest of qualification (Atterbury). UNQUARRELABLE. a. Such as cannot be impugned (Brown).

To UNQUEEN. v. a. To divest of the dignity of queen (Shakspeare). UNQUENCHABLE. a. Unextinguishable (Milton).

UNQUE NCHABLENESS. s. Unextinguishableness (Hakewill).

UNQUENCHED. a. 1. Not extinguished (Bacon). 2. Not extinguishable (Arbuthnot). UNQUESTIONABLE. a. 1. Indubitable; not to be doubted (Wotton). 2. Such as cannot bear to be questioned without impatience (Shakspeare).

UNQUESTIONABLY. ad. Indubitably; without doubt (Sprat).

UNQUESTIONED. a. 1. Not doubted; passed without doubt (Brown). 2. Indisputable; not to be opposed (Ben Jonson). 3. Not interrogated; not examined (Dryden).

UNQUICK. a. Motionless; not alive (Daniel).

UNQUICKENED. a. Not animated; not ripened to vitality (Blackmore).

UNQUIET.a. (inquiet, Fr. inquietus, Lat.) 1. Moved with perpetual agitation; not calm not still (Milton). 2. Disturbed; full of perturbation; not at peace (Shakspeare). 3. Restless; unsatisfied (Pope).

UNQUIETLY. ad. Without rest (Shak

speare).

UNQUIETNESS. s. 1. Want of tranquillity (Denham). 2. Want of peace (Spenser). 3. Restlessness; turbulence (Dryden). 4. Perturbation; uneasiness (Taylor).

UNRA'CKED. a. Not poured from the

UNPROPPED. a. Not supported; not lees (Bacon). O'PPE upheld (Milton).

UNPROSPEROUS. a. (improsper, Latin.) Unfortunate; not prosperous (Clarendon). UNPROSPEROUSLY. ad. Unsuccessfully (Taylor).

UNPROTECTED. a. Not protected; not supported; not riefended (Hooker).

UNPROVED. a. 1. Not tried; not known by trial (Spenser). 2. Not evinced by argument BoyNPROVIDE. v. a. To divest of re

solution or qualifications (Southern).

UNPROVIDED. a. 1. Not secured or qualified by previous measures (Shakspeare), 2. Not furnished (Sprat).

UNPROVOKED. a. Not provoked (Dry

den).

UNPUBLISHED a. 1. Secret; unknown (Shakspeare). 2. Not given to the public,

UNRA KED. a. Not thrown together and covered. Used only of fires (Shakspeare).

UNRA'NSACKED. a. Not pillaged. UNRA'NSOMED. a. Not set free by payment for liberty (Pope).

To UNRAVEL. v. a. 1. To disentangle; to extricate; to clear (Arbuthnot). 2. To disor der; to throw out of the present order (Dryden). 3. To clear up the intrigue of a play (Pope).

UNRA'ZORED. a. Unshaven (Milton). UNREACHED. a. Not attained (Dryd.). UNREAD a. 1. Not read; not publicly pronounced (Donne). 2. Untaught; not learned in books (Dryden).

UNREADINESS. s. 1. Want of readiness; want of promptness (Hooker). 2. Want of preparation (Taylor).

UNREADY, a. 1. Not prepared; not fit

(Shakspeare). 2. Not prompt; not quick (Brown). 3. Awkward; ungain (Bacon). UNREAL. a. Unsubstantial; having only appearance (Shakspeare).

UNREASONABLE. a. 1. Not agreeable to reason (Hooker). 2. Exorbitant; claiming or insisting on more than is fit (Dryden). 3. Greater than is fit; immoderate (Atterbury). UNREASONABLENESS. s. 1. Inconsistency with reason (Hammond). 2. Exorbitance; excessive demnand (Addison).

UNREASONABLY. ad. 1. In a manner contrary to reason. 2. More than enough (Shakspeare).

To UNRE AVE. v. a. To unravel (Spen

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speare).

UNREINED. a. Not restrained by the bridle (Milton).

UNRELE'NTING. a. Hard; cruel; feeling no pity (Smith).

UNRELIEVABLE. a. Admitting no succour (Boyle).

UNRELIEVED. a. 1. Not succoured (Dryden). 2. Not eased (Boyle).

UNREMARKABLE. a. 1. Not capable of being observed (Digby). 2. Not worthy of notice.

UNREME DIABLE. a. Admitting no remedy (Sidney).

UNREMEMBERED. a. Not retained in the mind; not recollected (Wotton).

UNREMEMBERING. a. Having no memory (Dryden).

UNREMEMBRANCE.s Forgetfulness; want of remembrance (Watts).

UNREMOVEABLE. a. Not to be taken away (Sidney).

UNREMOVEABLY. ad. In a manner that admits no removal (Shakspeare). UNREMOVED. a. 1. Not taken away (Hammond). 2. Not capable of being removed (Milton). UNREPAID. a. Not recompensed; not compensated (Dryden).

UNREPEALED. a. Not revoked; not abrogated (Blackmore).

UNREPENTANT. UNREPEʼNTING. a. Not repenting; not penitent; not sorrowful for sin (Milton. Roscommon).

UNREPENTED. a. Not expiated by penitential sorrow (Hooker).

UNREPI'NING. a. Not peevishly complaining (Rowe). UNREPLENISHED.a. Not filled(Boyle). UNREPRIEVABLE. a. Not to be respited from penal death (Shakspeare). UNREPROACHED. a. Not upbraided; not censured (King Charles).

UNREPRO'VÄBLE. a. Not liable to blame (Colossians).

UNREPRO VÉD. a. 1. Not censured (Sandys). 2. Not liable to censure (Milton). UNREPUGNANT. a. Not opposite

(Hooker).

UNREPUTABLE. a. Not creditable

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liated.

UNRESENTED. a. Not regarded with anger (Rogers).

UNRESERVED. a. 1. Not limited by any private convenience (Rogers). 2. Open; frank; concealing nothing.

UNRESERVEDLY. ad. 1. Without li mitation (Boyle). 2. Without concealment; openly (Pope).

UNRESERVEDNESS. §. 1. Unlimitedness; largeness (Boyle). 2. Openness; frankness (Pope).

UNRESI'STED. a. 1. Not opposed (Bentley). 2. Resistless; that cannot be opposed. UNRESI'STING. a. Not opposing; not making resistance (Bentley).

UNRESOLVABLE. a. Nor to be solved; insoluble (South).

UNRESOLVED. a. 1. Not determined; having made no resolution (Shakspeare). 2. Not solved; not cleared (Locke).

UNRESOLVING. a. Not resolving; not determined (Dryden).

UNRESPECTIVE. a. Inattentive; taking little notice (Shakspeare).

UNREST. s. Disquiet; want of tranquil lity; unquietness: not in use (Wotton). UNRESTORED. a. 1. Not restored. 2. Not cleared from an attainder (Collier).

UNRESTRAINED. a. 1. Not confined; not hindered (Dryden). 2. Licentious; loose (Shakspeare). 3. Not limited (Brown). UNRETRACTED. a. Not revoked; not recalled (Collier).

UNREVEALED. a. Not told; not dis covered (Spenser).

UNREVENGED. a. Not revenged (Fair

far).

UNREVEREND. «. Irreverent; disrespectful (Shakspeare).

UNREVERENTLY. ad. Disrepectfully (Ben Jonson).

UNREVERSED. a. Not revoked; not repealed (Shakspeare).

UNREVOKED. a. Not recalled (Milton). UNREWARDED. a. Not rewarded; not recompensed (L'Estrange).

To UNRIDDLE. v. a. To solve an enigma; to explain a problem (Suckling).

To UNRIG. v. a. To strip of the tackle (Dryden).

UNRIGHT. a. Wrong (Wisdom). UNRIGHTEOUS. a. Unjust; wicked; sinful; bad (Isaiah).

UNRIGHTEOUSLY. ad. Unjustly; wickedly; sinfully (Collier).

UNRIGHTEOUSNESS. s. Wickedness; injustice (Hall).

UNRIGHTFUL. a. Not rightful; not just (Shakspeare).

To UNRI'NG. v. a. To deprive of a ring. To UNRIP. v. a. (an improper word.) To rip; to cut open (Taylor).

UNRIPE. a. I. Immature; not fully concocted (Waller). 2. Not seasonable; not yet proper (Dryden). 3. Too early (Sidney). UNRIPENED. a. Not matured (Addis.). UNRIPENESS. s. Immaturity; want of ripeness (Bacon).

UNRIVALLED. a. 1. Having no competitor (Pope). 2. Having no peer or equal. To UNROL. v. a. To open what is rolled or convolved (Dryden).

UNROMÀ'NTIC. a. Contrary to romance

(Swift).

To UNROOF. v. a. To strip off the roof or covering of houses (Shakspeare).

UNROOSTED. a. Driven from the roost (Shakspeare).

To UNROOT. v. a. To tear from the roots to extirpate; to eradicate (Dryden). UNROUGH. a. Smooth (Shakspeare). UNROUNDED. a. Not shaped; not cut to a round (Donne).

UNROYAL. a. Unprincely; not royal (Sidney).

TO UNRUFFLE. v.a. To cease from commotion, or agitation (Dryden). UNRUFFLED. a. Calm; tranquil; not tumultuous (Addison).

UNRUʼLED. a. Not directed by any superior power (Spenser).

UNRULINESS. s. (from unruly.) Turbulence; tumultuousness; licentiousness (Sou.). UNRULY. a. Turbulent; ungovernable; licentious (Spenser).

UNSAFE. a. Not secure; hazardous; dangerous (Hooker).

UNSAFELY. ad. Not securely; dangerously (Dryden).

UNSA ID. a. Not uttered; not mentioned (Felton). UNSA'LTED. a. Not pickled or seasoned with salt (Arbuthnot).

UNSANCTIFIED. a. Unholy; not consecrated; not pious (Shakspeare).

UNSATIABLE. a. (insatiabilis, Latin.) Not to be satisfied; greedy without bounds (Raleigh).

UNSATISFACTORINESS. s. Failure of giving satisfaction (Boyle).

UNSATISFACTORY. a. 1. Not giving satisfaction. 2. Not clearing the difficulty (Stilling fleet).

UNSATISFIED. a. 1. Not contented; not pleased (Bacon). 2. Not settled in opimon (Boyle). 3. Not filled; not gratified to the full (Shakspeare).

UNSATISFÍEDNESS. s. (from unsatisfied.) The state of being not satisfied (Boyle). UNSATISFYING. a. Unable to gravity to the full (Addison).

UNSA'VOURINESS. s. (from unsavoury.) 1. Bad taste. 2. Bad smell (Brown).

UNSA'VOURY. a. 1. Tasteless (Job). 2. Having a bad taste (Milton). 3. Having an ill smell; fetid (Brown). 4. Unpleasing: disgusting (Hooker).

To UNSA'Y. v. a. To retract; to recant; to deny what has been said (Milton).

UNSCA'LY. a. Having no scales (Gay), UNSCA'RRED. a. Not marked with wounds (Shakspeare).

UNSCHOLASTIC. a. Not bred to literature (Locke).

UNSCHOO/LED. a. Uneducated; not learned (Hooker).

UNSCORCHED. a. Not touched by fire (Shakspeare).

UNSCREENED. a. Not covered; not protected (Boyle).

UNSCRIPTURAL. a. Not defensible by scripture (Atterbury).

To UNSEAL. v. a. To open any thing sealed Dryden)

UNSEALED. a. 1. Wanting a seal (Shakspeare). 2. Having the seal broken.

To UNSEAM. v. a. To rip; to cut open. UNSEARCHABLE. a. Inscrutable; not to be explored (Millon).

UNSEARCHABLENESS. s. Impossibility to be explored (Bramhall).

UNSEASONABLE. J. Not suitable to time or occasion; unfit; untimely; ill-timed (Clarendon). 2. Not agreeable to the time of the year (Shakspeare). 3. Late: as, unseasonable time of night.

UNSEASONABLENESS. s. Disagreemeat with time or place (Hale).

UNSEASONABLY. ad. Not seasonably; not agreeably to time or occasion (Hooker).

UNSEASONED. a. 1. Unseasonable; untimely; ill-timed out of use (Shakspeare). 2. Unformed; not qualified by use (Shakspeare). 3. Irregular; inordinate (Haywood). 4. Not kept till fit for use. 5. Not salted: as, unseasoned meat.

UNSE CONDED. a. 1. Not supported (Shakspeare). 2. Not exemplified a second time (Brown).

To UNSE CRET. v. a. To disclose; to di◄ vulge (Bacon).

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