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Show UN Not culpable ; no adj Uszrra'mMaBLE to be charged with a fault Much more could I fay concerning this unblaBacoi mable inequality of fines and rates He lov'd his people, him they idoliz'd 5 And thence proceeds my miortal hatred to him That, thus unblamable to all befide Dryden's Don Sebaftian He err'd to me alone taint o Withou adw UxBrLa'MABLY fault Ye are witnefles,and God alfo, how holily, an juftly, and wnblamably we behaved ourfc‘.vcs: 1 Thefls ii. 10 UxeLa'MED Blamelels adj free fro fault Shall fpend your days in joy unblaw'd, and dwel Milton's Paradife Left Long time in peace Unblam'd abundance crown'd the royal board "What time this dame rever'd her prudent lord Pope's ()dyl]( ‘Who now is doom'd to mourn UNBLE'MISHED tude fre turpi fro Fre adj reproach fro fro fre deformity O welcome, pure-ey'd faith, white-handed hope Thou hovering angel, girt with golden wings And thouwpblerifp'd form of chaftity Milton's Comus Under this ftone lies virtue, youth Unblemifp'd probity, and truth lf'a/'/fl‘ Is none worthy to be made a wif In all this town ? Suppofe her free fro ftrife Rich, fair, and fruitful; of unblemifp'd life. Dryd They appointed, out of thefe new converts, me of the beft fenfe, and of the moft unblemifb'd lives Addifon to prefide over thefe feveral affemblies Unere'~NcHED Not difgraced 5 no adj injured by any foil There, where very defolation dwells She may pafs on with unblench'd majefty Be it not done in pride, or in prefumption. Milzon Uxsre'spep Not mingled adj None can boaft a knowledge depurate from defilement, within this atmofphere of flefh3 it dwell no where in wnblended proportions on this fide th empyreum Glanwville UNBLE'ST. adj 1. Accurfed ; exclude from benedi&ion 1t is a thameful and wunblgffed thing, to take th fcum of people, and wicked, condemned men, t be the people with whom you plant Bacon 2. Wretched; unhappy In thy pow' it les yet, ere conception, to preven The race unbleft, to being yet unbegot Wha is true paffion Milton if unb/eft it dies And where is Emma's joy, if Henry flies Uxsroopiep blood &d No ftaine Prior wit Who finds the partridge in.the puttock's neft But may imagine how the bird was dead Although the kite foar with unbloodied beak. Shak Uxsroo'py. adj Not cruel ; not {hedding blood ; not ftained with blood Under the ledge of Atlas lies a cave The venerable feat of holy hermits Who there, fecure in feparated cells From the purling ftreams, and favage fruits Have wholefome bev'rage and unbloady feafts Dryden Un~sro'wn. adj unexpanded Ah Havin th bu ye my poor princes UnxerLu'~nTED. adj tufe Ah my tender babes Not becoming ob A fword, whofe weight without a blow migh flay' Able, unblunted, to cut hofts away If we could conceive of things as angels and un f th i th in ol in ho wi do ri {p bodie clouds language throws upon them, we fhould fel dom be in danger of fuch miftakes as are perpetuWatts's Logick aliy commitied z. Freed from the body She hath the bonds broke of eternal night Her foul unbodied of the burdenous corpfe. Spenfer All things are but alter'd, nothing dies And here and there th® unbody'd fpirit flies. Dryd Uneo'rLED Not fodden adj A quarter of a pint of rice unboiled, will arife to Bacon pint boiled To.Unso L unbar ‘To-de 4 w open Dawideis Cowley' IUNBO'DIED. ad) 2. Incorporeal ; immaterial t 1'1l call my uncle down He fhall unbolt the gates. Shak. Troilus and Creffida. Unxso'LTED Coarfe ; grofs ; not re adj fined, as flour, by bolting or fifting 1 will tread this wmbolted villain into mortar, an dau the wall of UnB0'NNETED bonnet jakes with him Shakelpeare's King Lear Wantin adj a hat o And bids what will, take all Shakefp. King Lear And his unkookifb jealoufy muft conftru Poor Caflio's {miles, geftures, and light behayiour te in the wrong Shake[peare's Othells Un~eo'rRN. adj. Not yet brought into life future ; being to come Some uzborn forrow, ripe in fortune's womb Shakefpeare's Richard X1 The woes to come, the children yet unbors Shall feel this day, as tharp to them as thorn. Shak Never fo much as in a thought wnbors Did I offend you Shakefpeare's As you like i He on the wings of cherubi rod Far into chaos, and the world unborn Milton's Paradife Loft To what wretched ftate referv'd Better end here unborn! Why is life giv' To be thus wafted from us? = Milton's Par. Loft A queen, from who The fouls of kings unborn for bodies wait. Dryden UnxBo'RROWED one's own Genuine ; native adj But the luxurious father of the fold With native purple, and anborrizw'd gold Beneath his pompous fleece fhall proudly fiveat Dryden In fubftances, efpecially thofe which the common and wnborreww'd names of any language ar applied to, fome remarkable, fenfible qualities ferv to diftinguit one fro od, with a ful his mercy reliance another Locke 70 Unpo'som. @. a 1. 'To reveal in confidence : Thc1merchan Milton Do we unbsforn all our fecrets to him, and hid nothing that pafleth in the depth of our heart Arterbury ShouldI thence; hurried on viewlefs wing Take up a weeping on the mountains wild The gentle neighbourhood of grove and fprin Milton bottomlefs The_d.u‘k, unbottom'd, infinite abyfs will leave our native commod export them to a market which wii not affor him returns with profit Uneo'UND Lock adj 1. Loofe; not tied z. Wanting a cover : ufed of books He that has complex ideas, without particula names for them, would be in no better cafe tha a bookfelle wh ha volume that lay unbound and without titles; which he could make k'now, to othcrs,_ only by thewing the loofe theets, Locke 3. Preterite of unbind Som fro 3 bound their chains the faithful dogs un Dryden adj interminable Long were to tell what I have done; I voyag'd the unreal, vaft, unbounded dee Of horrible confufion Milte The wide, th' unbounded profpeé lies before me But fhadows, clouds, and darknefs reft upon it Addifin He was a2 ma Of an unbounded ftomach, ever rankin Himfelf with princes Shake[pecres- ; He had given his curiofity its full, unbounded range and examined not only in contemplation, but b fenfitive experiment, whatever could be good fo the fons of men Decay of Picty Un~xeo'uNDEDLY. adv without limits So unboundedl Without bounds mifchievou is that petulan member, that heaven and earth are not wide enough for its range, but it will find work at home too Government of the Tongut Un~Bo'UNDEDNESS. 7./. Exemption fro limits the Finitude, applied to created things, import proportions of the feveral properties of thefe thing Infinitude, the wnboundednefs to one another Cheyne thefe degrees of properties Uxeo'weD Not bent adj He knits his brow, and fhews an angry eye, And pafleth by with ftiff, unbowed knee Difdaining duty that to us belongs. Shak. H. L 7o UxnBo'WEL evifcerate @, 2 To exenterate; 0 k In this chapter I Il unbowel the ftate of th _I_hff‘""" queftion It is now become a new fpecies of divisity, branch out with fond diftin&tions our holy 'ta_th, T which the pious fimplicity of the firft Chriftians ani a a upo rea t no practice t receive tomy, unbowel and diffet to try experiments Decay of Picty By thy requeft, who could deny thee nothing 1. Without bottom ties unbought upon the hands of the far e t}'xa 1. T adj z. Not finding any purchafer Not out.af levity, but overpower' UNBO'TTOMED endance depe}leance The unbou.ghr dainties of the poor. Dryd, Horaey 7o UxBRA'CE Would foon u#nbofom all their echoes mild and faé:xpeed, t:p;", U~NBO'UGHT. adj 1. Obtained without money 1lov'd thee, as too well thou knew'ft Too well5 unbgfor'd all my fecrets to thee 2. To open ; to difclofe truf " 2. Unlimited; unreftrained As he fhali fmile, Othello fhall go ma Up-lifted, in paternal glor uqb;}rtoryefi of ourfelyes 1. Infinite UxBOO'K1SH. adj r. Not ftudious of books z. Not cultivated by erudition Is coming tow'rd me This is 2 fpecial a& of Chriritiftanian Lan t(};m UNBO'UNDED This night, wherei The Jion and the beliy-pinched wol Keep their fur dry, unbonneted he vuas from him My unblown flowers, new-appearing fweets ! Shak UN UN Milton 2. Having no {olid foundation; having n reliance loofe 2. 4 to relax With whofe reproach and odious menact The knight emboiling in his haughty heart Knit all his forces, and gan foon unbrac His grafping hold. P woull doe ear m lfur mournf o Somewha ]D cries broke foldiers wit Drums unbrac''d aV?I{) har th an pfaltr th Nought fhal When the quick fpirits their warm marcmo},z" earth unbrac' ha coldnef numbin An rac huma withe tha Wafting years Exhauft thy fpirits, and thy arms unbrac Pape's Tliade e o l h o c t k m T 2 Is it phyfif;l,h £ u c f a ' a b u l To w fa Ce u l F e a S mon,xing Of the dan Hami U |