ungathered 
migathered (un-gaTH'erd), a. Not gathered 
together; not culled; not picked; not collect- 
ed ; specifically, noting printed sheets that have 
been folded, but not gathered in regular order 
for binding. 
Those persons whose souls are dispersed and ungathered 
by reason of a wanton humour to intemperate jesting are 
apt to be trifling in their religion. 
Jer. Taylor, Works (ed. 1835), I. 741. 
ungear (un-ger'), v. t. [< un- 2 + gear.'] To 
strip of gear; also, to throw out of gear. 
ungeneraled, ungeneralled (un-jen'e-rald), a. 
Made not general; local; particular. Fuller. 
[Rare.] 
ungenerated (un-jen'o-ra-ted), a. Not gener- 
ated; not brought into being. Raleigh. 
ungenerous (un-jen'e-rus), a. Not generous; 
not showing liberality or nobility of mind or 
sentiments ; illiberal ; ignoble ; dishonorable. 
The victor never will impose on Cato 
Ungen'rous terms. Addison, Cato. 
ungenerously (un-jen'e-rus-li), adv. In an un- 
generous manner ; illiberally; ignobly. 
ungenial (un-je'nial), a. Not genial, (a) Not 
favorable to natural growth : as, ungenial air ; ungenial 
soils. (6) Not kindly ; unpleasant ; disagreeable ; harsh ; 
unsympathetic : as, an ungenial disposition, (c) Not con- 
genial ; not suited or adapted. [Rare.] 
Critical explanations of difficult passages of Scripture 
... do well for publication, but are ungenial to the hab- 
its and taste of a general audience. 
Sydney Smith, in Lady Holland, iii. 
ungenituredt (un-jen'i-turd), a. Wanting gen- 
itals ; wanting the power of propagation ; im- 
potent. Shak., M. for M., iii. 2. 184. 
ungenteel (un-jen-teT), a. Not genteel; im- 
polite ; rude : of persons or manners. 
ungenteelly (un-jen-tel'li), adv. In an ungen- 
teel manner; impolitely; uncivilly. Edinburgh 
Rev. 
ungentle (un-jen'tl), a. [< ME. ungcntel; < -! 
+ gentle.] 1. Not gentle ; harsh ; rough ; rude ; 
ill-bred; impolite. 
When nature biddeth thee to be good and gentle to 
other, she coramaudeth thee not to be cruel and ungentle 
to thyself. Sir T. More, Utopia (tr. by Robinson), ii. 7. 
Caisar cannot live 
To be ungentle. Shak., A. and C., v. 1. 60. 
2. Not noble ; plebeian. 
Sum man hath grete rychesses, but he is ashamyd of his 
ungentel lynage. Chaucer, Boethius, ii. prose 4. 
ungentlemant (un-jen'tl-man), v. t. Same as 
ungentlemanize. 
Some tell me home-breeding will ungentleman him. 
Gentleman Instructed, p. 645. (Dairies.) 
nngentlemanize (un-jen'tl-man-iz), v. t. [< -i 
+ gentleman + -ize.] To deprive of the char- 
acter of a gentleman ; make boorish. [Rare.] 
Unmanning and un-gentleinanizing themselves to any 
extent. C. A. Bristed, English University, p. 416. 
ungentlemanlike (un-jen'tl-man-lik), a. Not 
like a gentleman ; not becoming a gentleman ; 
ungentlemanly. Sydney Smith, To John Allen. 
ungentlemanliness (un-jen'tl-man-li-nes), n. 
The character of being ungentlemanly. Quar- 
terly Rev. 
ungentlemanly (un-jen'tl-man-li), . Not be- 
fitting a gentleman ; rude; uncivil; ill-bred. 
Swearing in the Playhouse is an ungentlemanly as well 
as an unchristian Practice. 
Jeremy Collier, Short View, p. 59. 
=Syn. See uncivil. 
ungentlemanly (un-jen'tl-man-li), adv. In an 
ungentlemanly manner ; not as a gentleman. 
To defraud and cousen them ungentlemanly of their 
parents love, which is the greatest and fairest portion of 
their inheritance. Holland, tr. of Plutarch, p. 148. 
ungentleness (un-jen'tl-nes), n. 1. Want of 
gentleness; harshness; severity; rudeness. 
2. Want of politeness; incivility. Shak., As 
you Like it, v. 2. 83. 
ungently (un-jent'li), adv. In an ungentle man- 
ner ; harshly; with severity; rudely. Shah., 
Tempest, i. 2. 444. 
ungennine (un-jen'u-in), a. Not genuine. 
His best Plays are almost always Modest and clean 
Complexion'd. His Amphitrio, excepting the ungenuine 
Addition, is such. Jeremy Collier, Short View, p. 18. 
ungenuineness (un-jen'u-in-nes), n. The char- 
acter of being ungenuine ; spuriousness. 
unget (un-gef), v. t. [< un- 2 + ye ft. Of. un- 
beget.] To treat as if unbegotten. [Rare.] 
I'll disown you ; I'll disinherit you ; 
I'll unget you. Sheridan, The Rivals, 
ungifted (un-gif'ted), a. Not gifted, (a) Not 
endowed with peculiar faculties. 
A hot-headed, ungifted, unedifying preacher. 
Arbuthnot, Hist, of John Bull, xxiii. 
(6) Not having received a gift ; without a present 
6610 
lest thou depart the coast ungifted. 
Cowper, Odyssey, xv. 
ungild (un-gild'), v. t. [< un- 2 + gild*.] To de- 
prive of gilding. 
It will ungild one face of the object while the other 
face becomes gilt. Workshop Receipts, 1st ser., p. 196. 
ungilded, ungilt (un-gil'ded, un-gilt'), a. Not 
gilt; not overlaid with gilding. 
Our mean ungilded stage. Dryden. 
ungilding (un-gil'ding), n. The act or process 
of depriving of gilding ; hence, figuratively, a 
stripping off of decorations. 
By all this wee may conjecture how little wee needo 
feare that the unguilding of our Prelates will prove the 
woodening of our Priests. Milton, Animadversions. 
Articles of iron, steel, and silver, which cannot be sub- 
mitted to the ungilding-l>ath. 
Workshop Receipts, 1st ser., p. 205. 
ungill (un-gil'), v. t. [< MH-2 + gall.] To re- 
lease the gills of (a fish) from the net ; take or 
remove from a gill-net, as fish. 
ungiltt (un-gilt')) *' t. An obsolete variant of 
ungild. 
Bycause that there was none yll that did vngilte it. 
Golden Boke, Prol. 
ungiltift/'. [ME. : see wnguilty.] Without guilt; 
innocent. 
Is this an honour unto thy deyte, 
That folk ungiltif suflren here injure ? 
Chaucer, Troilus, iii. 1018. 
ungird (un-gerd'), v. t. [< un- 2 + gird.] To 
loosen by taking off the girdle, as a robe ; also, 
to take the girdle or belt from. 
The sportive exercises for the which the genius of Mil- 
ton ungirds itself. Macaulay. 
ungivet (un-giv'), v. [< un- 2 -f- give.'} To give 
way ; relax ; slacken. 
That religion which is rather suddenly parched up than 
seasonably ripened doth commonly nngive afterwards. 
Fuller, Ch. Hist, II. ii. 40. (Davies.) 
Ullgiving (un-giv'ing), a. Not bringing gifts. 
Dryden. [Rare.] 
ungka, n. See imga. 
ungka-puti (ung'ka-put-i), . [Native name.] 
The active gibbon of Sumatra, Hylobates agilis. 
Also called ungha, ungka-pati, ungha-ctam. 
ungladt (un-glad' ), a. [ME. unglad, < AS. un- 
glsed (= Icel. ugladhr), not glad; as un-1 + glad.'} 
Sorry; sad. Alliterative Poems (ed. Morris), 
iii. 63. 
ungladden (un-glad'n), v. t. [< -2 + gladden.] 
To deprive of gladness; leave uncheered; make 
sad. [Rare.] 
It wears, to my eye, a stern and sombre aspect too 
much ungladdened by genial sunshine. 
Hawthorne, Scarlet Letter, p. 49. 
unglaze (un-glaV), v. t. [< un- 2 + glaze.] To 
take the glass from, as a window or window- 
sash. 
unglazed (un-glazd'), a. 1. Unprovided with 
glass, or with glass windows. 2. Not coated 
or covered with vitreous matter : as, unglazed 
earthenware. See unglazed pottery, under pot- 
tery. 
ungloomed (un-glomd'), a. Not darkened, over- 
shadowed, or overclouded. [Rare.] 
With look ungloomed by guile. M. Green, The Spleen. 
unglorified (un-glo'ri-fid), a. Not glorified; 
not honored with praise or adoration. Dryden. 
unglorify (un-glo'ri-fi), v. t. [< un- 2 + glorify.] 
To deprive of glory. Watts, Remnants of Time, 
31. [Rare.] 
unglorioust (un-glo'ri-us), a. Not glorious; 
bringing no glory or honor ; inglorious. Wyclif, 
Job xii. 19. 
unglosedt, a. See nnglozed. 
unglove (un-gluv'), v. t. [< un- 2 + glove.] To 
take off the glove or gloves from. 
Unglove your hand. 
Fletcher (and Massinyerl), Lovers' Progress, ii. 1. 
unglozedt (un-glozd'), a. [< ME. uuglosed; < 
un- 1 + glazed.] Not glozed or glossed. 
Late jowre conf essoure, sire kynge, construe this mglosed. 
Piers Plowman (B), iv. 145. 
unglue(un-glo'), v. t. [< un- 2 + glue.] To sep- 
arate, as that which is glued or cemented; 
hence, figuratively, to free from any strong at- 
tachment. 
Unglue thyself from the world and the vanities of it. 
Bp. Hall, Christ Mystical, 24. 
unglutted (un-glut'ed), a. Not glutted ; not 
satiated or saturated ; not cloyed. 
Seyd's unglutted eye. Byron, Corsair, ii. 8. 
Ungnadia (un-gnad'i-a), M. [NL. (Endlicher, 
1833), named for Ungiiad, who wrote (1757) on 
ungovernably 
Persian fruits.] A genus of plants, of the order 
Sapindaeese and tribe Sapindese. It is distinguished 
from the related genus jEsculus, the horse-chestnut, by its 
alternate pinnate leaves, and by its flowers with a tongue- 
shaped disk. The only species, U. epeciosa, the Spanish 
buckeye, is a native of Texas and Mexico, having n soft 
satiny reddish wood. It is a small tree, or sometimes a 
low shrub, with leaves of from 3 to 7 serrate leaflets, the ter- 
minal leaflet being long-stalked. The rose-colored flowers 
are aggregated in lateral clusters or corymbs, followed by 
a coriaceous three-lobed capsule containing three globose 
seeds resembling those of the horse-chestnut, but with 
emetic properties, and reputed poisonous. 
ungoardt, a. See ungored 1 . 
ungod 1 (un-god'), v. t. ; pret. and pp. ungodded, 
ppT.unr/odding. [< un- 2 -I- god 1 .] 1. To divest 
of the divine attributes or qualities, real or sup- 
posed ; divest of divinity ; undeify. Dr. J. Scott. 
[Rare.] 2. To deprive of a god, or cause to 
recognize no god ; make atheistical or godless. 
[Rare.] 
Thus men ungodded may to places rise, 
And sects may be preferred without disguise. 
Dryden, Hind and Panther, iii. 742. 
ungod 2 t, a. A Middle English form of ungood. 
ungodlily (un-god'li-li), adv. In an ungodly 
manner; impiously; wickedly. 
ungodliness (un-god'li-nes), n. The quality of 
being ungodly ; impiety ; wickedness. 
The wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all 
ungodliness. Rom. i. 18. 
ungodly (un-god'li), a. 1. Not godly; careless 
of God; godless; wicked; impious; sinful: as, 
ungodly men or ungodly deeds. 1 Pet. iv. 18. 
Glory to him whose just avenging ire 
Had driven out the ungodly from his sight. 
Milton, P. L., vii. 185. 
2. Polluted by wickedness. 
The hours of this ungodly day. 
Shak., K. John, iii. 1. 109. 
Such an ungodly sickness I have got 
That he that undertakes my cure must first 
O'erthrow divinity, all moral laws. 
Beau, and Fl., King and No King, iii. 1. 
3. Outrageous; extremely annoying. [Slang.] 
The poisonous nature of the wind, and its ungodly and 
unintermittent uproar, would not suffer me to sleep. 
B. L. Stevenson, Olalla. 
4. Squeamish; nice. Halliwcll. [Prov. Eng.] 
=Syn. 1. Godless, Unrighteous, etc. See irreligious. 
ungoodt (un-gud'), a. [< ME. ungood, ungod, < 
AS. ungod (= OHG. MHG. unguot, G. ungut = 
Icel. ugodlir), not good ; as un- 1 + good.] Not 
good; bad. 
ungoodlyt (un-gud'li), a. [< ME. ungoodly; < 
MH-i + goodly, a.] Not goodly; not good; bad. 
I nolde holde hir ungoodly. Rom. of the Rose, 1. 3741. 
ungoodlyt (un-gud'li), adv. [< ME. ungoodly, 
ongoodly ; < w-l + goodly, adv.] Not well; ill. 
He was ongoodly servyd ther in. 
Ponton Letters, III. 125. 
ungored 1 (un-gord'), a. [< an- 1 + gore 1 + -ed 2 .] 
Not stained or marked with gore ; unbloodied. 
[Rare.] 
Helms of gold 
Vngoard with bloud. 
Sylvester, The Vacation, p. 288. (Davies.} 
ungored 2 (un-gord'), a. [< MM- 1 + gore 2 + -ed 2 .] 
Not gored; not wounded as with a horn or spear. 
I have a voice and precedent of peace, 
To keep my name ungored. 
Shak., Hamlet, v. 2. 261. 
ungorged (un-gorjd'), a. Not gorged; not 
filled ; not sated. 
Ungorged with flesh and blood. 
Dryden, Theodore and Honoria. 
ungorgeous (un-gor'jus), a. Not gorgeous; 
not showy or splendid. Carlyle, French Rev., 
II. iv. 8. (Davies.) [Rare.] 
ungotten, ungot (un-got'n, -got'), a. 1. Not 
gained. Daniel, Civil Wars, vii. 2f. Not be- 
gotten. 
Ungotten and unborn. Shak., Hen. V., i. 2. 287. 
ungovernable (un-guv'er-na-bl), a. 1. Inca- 
pable of being governed, ruled, or restrained ; 
not to be regulated by laws or rules ; refrac- 
tory; unruly. 
So ungovernable a poet cannot be translated literally. 
Dryden. 
I trust . . . that our enemies, who predict that the in- 
dulgence will make us more insolent and ungovernable, 
may find themselves false prophets. 
Franklin, Autobiography, p. 380. 
2. Licentious; wild; unbridled: as, iingni-crn- 
ablc passions. = Syn. Unmanageable, intractable, un- 
controllable. See govern. 
ungovernableness (un-giiv'er-na-bl-nes), n. 
The state of being ungovernable. 
ungovernably (un-guv'er-na-bli), adv. In an 
ungovernable manner; so as not to be governed 
or restrained. Goldsmith. 
