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Show UNG UN without impatience : this feems to be th meaning here What were his marks -- lean cheek, which you bave not; an un Shkakdfp queflionable pirit, which you have not Unque'stionasLy. adv Indubitably without doubt If the fathers were ungueftionably of the houthol of faith, and all to do good to themj then certainly their children canno be ftrangers in thi Spratt houfhold St. Auftin was wngucflionably a man of parts, but interpofing in a controverfy where his talent di not lie, fhewed his zeal againft th very ill purpofe antipodes t Burnct UxqQuE'sTIONED. adj 1. Not doubted ; paffed without doubt Other relations in good authors, though we d not pofitively deny, yet have they not been #ngue/tioned by fome Brown 2. Indifputable ; not to be oppofed Itdid not pleafe the gods, who inftruct the people And their ungucftion'd pleafures muft be fery'd Ben Fonfon 3. Not interrogated ; not examined Sheimutt'ring pray'rs, as holy rites {he meant Through the divided crowd ungueftion'd went. Dryd Uxqur'ck adj Motionlefs ; not alive His fenfes droop, his fteady eyes unquick And much he ails, and yet he is not fick Daniel's Civil War Uxqui'ckeNED. adj Not animated ; no ripened to vitality Clafp'd and enwrapp'd within each other lie Blackmore UnQur'er. adj. [inquiet, Fr. inguietus Latin. 1. Moved with perpetual agitation; mo not ftill From grammatick flats and fhallows, they ar on the fudden tranfported to be toded and turin fathomlef Milton 2. Difturbed; full of perturbation ; not a peace Go with me to church, and call me wife And then away to Venice to your friend ¥or never thall you lie by Portia's fid With an wnquiet foul. Sbake[p. Merchant of Venice Thy love hopeful to regain From thee I will not hid What thoughts in my unguiet breaft are ris'n Milton 3. Reftlefs ; unfatisfied She glares in balls, front boxes, and the ring A vain, anguiet, glitt'ring, wretched thing. Pope Mirth from company is but a fluttering, unguie motion, that beats about the breaft for a few moments, and after leaves it empty Pope Unqur'erry adv Without reft Shakefpeare's King Lear UNQu1i'ETNESS, 7. / 1. Want of tranquillity and ftart to new wnguict nefs Denbam 2. Want of peace It is moft enemy to war quictnefs an 3. Reftleflnefs ; turbulence moft hateth ux Sp What pleafure can there be in that eftate Which your unguictnefs has made me hate ? Dryd 4. Perturbation y. uneafinefs Is my lord angry ?- =~He went hence but now Unra'ckED Mot poured from th adj lees Rack the one vefiel from the lees, and pour th lees of the racked veffel into the znracked vefiel Bacon's Natural Hiftory Uxra‘kED, adj. Not thrown together an Ufed only of fires covered Cricket, to Windfor chimnies thalt thou leap Where fires thou find'ft zsrak'd fwept There pinch the maids and hearths un Shakefpeare's Merry Wives of Windfor Unra'~sackep adj Not pillaged He gave that rich city for a prey unto his foldiers, who left neither houfe nor corner thereof uz ranfacked Kinolles Uxra'nsoMED. adj. Not fet free by payment for liberty Unranfor'd here receive the fpotlefs fair Accept the hecatomb the Greeks prepare Pope's liad 7o UNRAVEL @. 2 1. To difentangle; to extricate ; to clear He has wnravelled the ftudied cheats of grea artificers Fell There unrawel al This dark defign, this myftery of fate Addifon's Cato With Machiavelian fagacity thou anrawelledf intrigues of ftate Arbuthnot How can any thing fucceed well with people tha are to be pleafed with nothing, unlefs the ball of th univerfe may be wnravelled, and the laws of Providence revecfi 3 L' Efirauge O the traytor's name Il know it I will = art fhall be conjur'd for it And natureall unravell'd. Drydenand Lee's Oedipus So prophane and fceptical an-age takes a pride i g all the received principles of reafon an religion Tillotfon 3. To clear up the intrigue ofa play The fulution or unraweiling of the intrigue commences, when the reader b:gins to fee the doubt cleared up Paope Thus fupernaturally is the plot brought to perfe€tion; nor is the wnrawelling of it lefs happil imagined UxrA"ZORED adj Shekefpeare Tlluftrated Unfhaven As fmooth as Hebe's their unrazior'd lips UNRE‘ACHED adj Not attained Labour with unequal force to clim i That lofty hill, #nreach'd by former tifhe And certainly in firange anguictnefs, Shak, Othello Milt Dryd Thefe books are fafer and better to be left publickly unread Hooker His mufe had ftarv'd, had not a piece wnread And by a player bought, fupply'd her bread Uncertain whofe the narrower fpan The clown unread, or half-read gentleman UnrE‘ADINESS nefs 7 / Lryd Dryd the find in us, they turn it to the foothing up o themfelves in that accurfed fancy Hooker 2. Want of preparation Nothing is fo great an enemy to tranquillity and a contented fpirit, as the amazement and confufions of unreadinefs and inconfideration Taylor's Rule of Liming Holy U~RrRE‘ADY. adj 1. Not prepared; not fit 2. I\P{ot prompt ; not quick rom a temperate inaétivi put in e).cccution the fnggc(fioi,s X'cr::x?(,:,irzd{yt content in every fpeci thadow thcrcof.y tru 3. Awkward ; ungain cmbrj‘;c th Young men, in the condué o ations, ufe ey treme remedies at fift, and, that which doublet a.ll errors will not acknowledge or retrag tb like an wnready horfe, that wil néither ftop no‘r-tl;n‘\' Bacon UsRrREAL. ad). Unfubftantial only appearance havin Hence, terrible thadow Unreal mock'ry, hence Shakefpeare's Machag 1 with pai Voyag'd th' unreal vaft unbounded dee Of hc}rrible confufion UNREASONABLE adj Milton's P;mdye Laf 1. Exorbitant; claiming or infifting more than is fic Since every language is fo full of its own pro prieties, thatwhatis beautiful in one, s often burbarous in another, it would be unreafonable to limi a tranflatdr to the narrow compafs of his author words Dryden's Preface to 0vid My intention in pfefixing your name, is nott defire your protection of the following papers, whic I take to be a very anreafonable requeft'; fince, b being infcribed to you, you cannet recommen them without fome fufpicion of partiality Savift's ProjeéF for the Adwancement of Religion 2. Not agreeable to reafon No reafon know to us but that there is n reafon thereof, I judge moft unreafmable to imagine Hooker 1t is unreafonable for men to be judges in thei own cafes; felf-love will make men partial t themfelves and their friends Locke ~She entertained many wanreafonable prejudice againft him, before fhe was acquainted with bi perfonal worth 3. Greater than is fit ; immoderate Addign Thofe that place their hope in another worl have, in a great meafure, conquered dread of death and unreafonable love of life UNREASONABLENESS Atterbary 7., 1. Exorbitance ; exceflive demand ‘The unreafenablencfs of their proj)ofitim_)s‘is no more evident, than that they are not the joint defires of the major number King Charles A young univerfity difputant was complainin of the unreafonablencfs of a lady, with whom h was engaged in a point of controverfy z. Inconfiftency with reafon The unreafonablenefs and prefumption: of thol that thus projec, have not fo much as a thought all their lives long to advance fo far as attritior Hammond UnRrRE ASONABLY. adv 1. In a manner contrary to reafon 2. More than enough Il not over the threfhold, till my lord retu of readinefs; want of prompt This impreparation and wzreadinefs whe Hew now, my lords? what all unicady fy Sl"; Addifor's I re(l*a/d:( UxRrE‘AD. adj 1. Not read ; not publickly pronounced 1. Wan Thou, like a violent noife, cam'ft ruthing in And malk'it them wak unguietnefs of {pirit, and diftraétion of our fc|_1(rzs Taylor z. Untaught; not learned in books Who''s there befides foul weather ?- ~--One minded like the weather, mof Ungquietly comes al {ent order Which num'rous but unguicken'd progen moiled with their unballafted wits and unguiet depths of controverfy inordinate ‘love, and vain fear z. To diforder ; to throw eut of the pre Every feetus bears a fecret hoard ‘With fleeping, unexpanded iflue ftor'd calm Fro UN The fairy knigh Departed thence, albe his wounds wide Not throughly heal'd, unready were to ride, Sper/ fro you confine yourfelf mof the wars.-Fye Slyakgfpsart. unreafonably a 70 UxRE AVE. w t perba ravel o un, and reave fame wit der. riwve, to tear, O b reak afun o unwind; to difentangle Penelope, for her Ulyfles' fake Devis'd 2 web her wooers to deceive Tn which the work that the all day did make The fame at night the did wnreaze Not blun_ted adj UnrREBA'TED Sperper te eb un t w A number of fencers try it ou fwords U~xREBU'KABLE 44j Hakewil Obnoxious to cenfure Keep this commandment without fpot im anrebi vie 1 idlfl' ‘ l C o P ‘ a i avb 16" u nti I e Tim." V |