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Show UN UnMo'anED 2. Having no power to raife the paffions 3| Unna‘vicasre, adj Not lamented adi a T Fatherlefs diftrefs was left unmoan'd Your widow dolours likewife be unwept, Shakefp U~xwmo1'st adj Not wet Volatile Hermes, fluid and wamoif? Mounts on the wings of air UxmorsTENED Philips Not made wet adf incide nt'light that meets wit a groffer li-quor, will'have its beams more or lefs interruptedly refle¢ted, than they would be if the body ha bee Rened Boyle T'h NMOLE'STED. adj. Free from difturbance; free from external troubles Cleopatra was read o'er While.Scot, and Wake, and twenty more That teach one to deny one's felf d on the fhelf Prior of the air, and the beafts of the field ave fupplied with every thing, unmolefted by hope \Qr Rogers Safe on m thore each wumolefied fwai Shall tend the flocks, or reap the bearded grain I'&[)e T UxMOOR @ a 1. To loofe from land, by taking up th anchors And-brought our captives and our ftores aboard Pope 2. Prior feems to have taken it for caftin anchor Soon as the Britith fhips unmoor And jolly leng-boat rows to fhore Prior Untutored by mo This is cenfured as the mark of a difiolute an unmioralized temper Norris Uxmo'RTGAGED adj Not mortgaged Is there one God unfworn to my deftruction The lealt unmortgag'd hope ? for, if there be Methinks I cannot fall Dryden's Al for Love This he has repeated o often, that at prefen there is fcaxce a fingle gabel ummortgaged Addifon on Ttaly Uxmo'rTIFIED, ad) {orrow and feverities Not fubdue If our confcience reproac b remove adj Not lamented ; no adj Unxmo'urn~ED deplored O let me here fink dow Into my grave unmention'd and unmmonrn'd Scuthern 7o UNMU'FFLE. w. vering from the face To put off a co Unmuffle, ye faint ftars! and thou, fair moon That wont'ft to love the traveller's benizon Stoop thy pale vifage through an amber cloud And difinherit chaos, that reigns her In double night, of darknefs and of fhades. Mil Uxwmu'sicaL Not harmonious ; no adj pleafing by found Nor jars interpofe, facred friendfhip to grieve Ben Fonfon makes up the very unmufical harmony of our mur™murs Decay of Picty 7o UxMu'zzLE w. a To loofe from muzzle Now unmuzzle your wifdom Shakefpeare Have you not fet mine honour at the ftake And baited it with all th® zamuzzled thought Thy tyrannous heart can think Unna'™MED adj Shakefpeare's Tavelfth Night Not mentioned Author of evil, unknown till thy revolt Unian'd in heav'n Milton's Paradife Lof? Unna'TURAL. adj 1. Contrary to the laws of nature ; contrary to the common inftinéts Her offenc Muft be of fuch wnnatural degree That monfters it Shakefpeare's King Lear People of weak heads on the one hand, an Locke adj 1. Not put out of one place into another Vipers that do fl May's Virgil Nor winds, nor winter's rage o'erthrow His bullky body, but wamov'd he grows Dryden Chefs-men ftanding on the fame fquares of th chefs-board, we fay they are all in the fame place or unmoved; though, perhaps, the chefs-board hat been carried out of one room into another. Locke 2. Not changed in refolution Not affected; not touche paflion Milton with an Czfar, the world's great mafter and his ewn fuperior ftill in every ftate And fcarce detefted in his country's fate 4. Unaltered by paflion Poppe I meant to mee My fate with face umnow'd, and eyes unwet, Dryd UxwMmo'vinG. adf 1. Having no motion The celeftial bodies, without impulfe, had continued unactive, unmoving heaps of matter 's Philofophical Principles L'Eftrange 2. A&ing without the affeCtions implante by nature Rome, whofe gratitud Tow'rds her deferving children is enroll' In Jove's own book The light, oft under #nmov'd falls do lie Among innumerable falfe, znmov'd Unfhaken, unfeduc'd infirmities of old age What will he be to us 3. Forced ; not agreeable to the real ftat not reprefentin nature They admire only glittering trifles, that in ferious poem are naufeous, becaufe they are uznatural Would any man,. who is ready to die fo love, defcribe his pafiion like Narcifius? Dryden In an heroic poem, two kinds of thoughts ar carefully to be avoided; the firft, are fuch as ar affected and unmatural mean and vulgar Unwa'rurarry the fecond adv fuch as ar Addifon In oppofition t nature All the world have been frighted with an apparition of their own fancy, or they have moft #nwaturally confpired to cozen themfelves Tillotfon Unw~a'ruraLNess z / Contrariety t nature The God which is the God of nature doth neve teach wnnaturalnefs The helm let politick expevience guide Vet ceafe to hope thy thort-livid bark fhai rid Down fpreading fate's unnawigable tide Prigr The Indian feas were believed to be unnaq;ig‘al}Ie‘ Arbuthpgy UNNE'CESSARILY adv. Without necef fity ; without need ; needlefsly "T'o abrogate, without conftraint of manifeft har thereby arifing, had been to alter unnecelfarilyy i their judgment th the antien received cuffom o whole church Hooker *Tis highly imprudent in the greateft of men mmec{fl?zr}/y to provoke the meaneft Thef words com L-'E_/lrange in without any connexio with the ftory, and confequently unneceffarily Broome 7 / Needleffuefs Thefe are fuch extremes as afford no middle fo induftry to exift; hope being equally out-dated b the defperatenefs or unnece/faringfs of an undertaking Decay of Piety. UnxxE'CESSARY adj Needlefs ; no wanted ; ufelefs The doing of things unneceffary, is many time the caufe why the moft neceffary are not done Hogker Thou whorefon zed; thou unneceffary letter Shakefpeare fitted for command by feao Let brave fpirits land, not be laid by as perfons unnecellary for th Bacon, - time Lay that unneceffary fear afide Mine be the care new people to provide. ~ Dryde Unneceffary coinage, as well as unneceffary reviva of words, runs into affe@ation; a fault to be Dryden avoided on either hand They did not only thun perfecution, butaffirme that it wa amneceffar for their followers to l?ea Addifom their religion through fuch fiery trials UxNErGHBOURLY adj. Notkind; no fuitable to the duties of a neighbour Parnaffus is but a barren mountain, and its in habitants make it mor fo by their unneighbourl Garth deportment ne ma I adv LY OU GH EI UN mat \.' o h i n t l ta fu no levolence3 with mutual mlfchlef. ear kef Sha y ur hb ei un f i n fp t And no Sidney adj UnNERVATE feeble Weak bad word Denham's Sopby of perfons or things Some who the depths of eloquence haveeif‘;u"!;{i In that unnavigable fiveam were drown'd, D Let wit her fails, her oats let wifdom lc d-y The blood of malice in a vein of league Shakefp. Coriolanus If the tyrant were To a fon fo noble, {fo unnatural Like a fwift fiream from mounta ns pours alng Thefe two Chriftian armies might combin like an znnatural dam Should now eat up her own Not to be pae by veflels, not to be navigate Pindar's unnavigable fon Uxne'cessarinEss Let argument bear no znmufical fonnd Such as cannot b daries of that fpecies Unmov'd And the inglorious likenefs of a beaf Fixes inftead, namonlding reafon's mintage Milton Charaéter'd in the face ral divorce between being wife and good Glanwille's Scepfis *Tis irreverent and wmnatural, to fcoft at th Wherein confift the precife and unmowveable boun 3 Its pleafing poifo The vifage quite transforms of bim that drinks vile affections on the other, have made an #nnatu or altered PN MOVED To change as t a w 7o Unmo'uLDp the form us with wamortifie +in, our hope is the hope of an hypocrite. Rogers Uxuo'vEaBLE unaffeting One man's ambition wants fatisfaétion, another's avarice, a third's fpleen ; and this difcor We with the rifing morn our thips ummoor'd UnM0'RAL1ZED. adj rality UN N Scaliger calls them fine and lively in Mufzeus r m H i u i o r h u a t v r n u but abjeé Broome 4 ¥ VE 7o UNNE' enfeeble ci o fu a t n m f t o a The precept '3 Vel ;" fe C"InfianCCS that t UNNE'RVED adj Y \Vi\'Cflke an u"fler‘v h Weak ; feeble. wi e i f g r i e i d Pyrrhus at Pr I ? O W ' l f h o n w a But )\{\'ith t Shakelpeare' The winerw'd father falls [This adv Un~NE'TH UnNE'THES. } ead ought therefo Scarcely ; hardly; n Obf{olete Diggon, I That And how the fore, Beating the wit o 7 |