unheedingly 
unheedingly (un-he'ding-li), adv. Ill an un- 
heeding manner; carelessly. 
unheedy (un-he'di),a. 1. Unheeding; careless. 
So have I seen some tender slip . . . 
Pluck'cl up by some unhei'dy swain. 
Milton, Epitaph on Marchioness of Winchester, 1. 38. 
2. Precipitate ; sudden. 
Wings and no eyes figure unheedy haste. 
Shak., M. N. D., i. 1. 237. 
unheelt, <' t. See unheal' 2 . 
unheired (un-ard'), a. Without an heir. 
To leave him utterly unheired. Chapman. 
unhelet, See unheal. 
unhelm (un-helm'),i>. t [< i- 2 + helm 1 *.] To 
deprive of a helm or helmet. Scott, Ivanhoe. 
unhelmet (un-hel'met), v. t. [< un- 2 + helmet.'] 
To uuhelm. 
unhelpful (un-help'ful), a. 1. Affording no 
aid. Shak., 2 Hen. VI., iii. 1. 218. 2. Unable 
to help one's self ; helpless. Buskin. 
unhelpfully (un-help'ful-i), adv. In an unhelp- 
ful manner; without giving aid. 
unhendet (un-hend'), a. [< ME. unhende, on- 
hende; < un- 1 + hend 2 .] Ungracious; discour- 
teous ; ungentle ; hard. 
Then Am I thyne Enemye moste vnhcnde. 
Political Poems, eta. (ed. Furnivall), p. 190. 
unheppen (un-hep'en), a. [< n-l + heppen, 
for "helpen, holpen, pp. of help : see help.] Mis- 
shapen; ill-formed; clumsy; awkward. Tenny- 
son, The Village Wife. [Prov. Eng.] 
unheritablet (un-her'i-ta-bl), a. Barred from 
inheritance ; disqualified as an heir. 
Thereby you [are] justly made illegitimate and unher- 
itable to the crown imperial of this realm. 
Heylin, Reformation, ii. 207. (Dames.) 
unheroic (un-he-ro'ik), . Not heroic. 
unheroism (un-her'o-izm), n. That which is 
not heroic ; unheroic character or action; cow- 
ardice. [Rare.] 
Their greedy quackeries and unheroisms. 
Carlyle, Cromwell, i. C5. 
unhesitating (un-hes'i-ta-ting), a. Not hesi- 
tating; without misgiving or doubt; prompt; 
ready. 
unhesitatingly (un-hes'i-ta-ting-li), adv. With- 
out hesitation or doubt. 
unhidden (un-hid'n), a. Not hidden or con- 
cealed; open; manifest. Shak., Hen. V., i. 1. 80. 
nnhidet (uu-hid'), i\ t. [< ME. unhiden; < wjj- 1 
+ hide 1 .'] To reveal the nature of; disclose. 
Tyl I this vomauce may unhide. 
Rom,, of the Rose, 1. 2168. 
unhillt, v. t. [ME. unMllen, mihilen; < - 2 + 
hilft. Of. unheal' 2 .'] To uncover; unroof. 
And if his hous be vnh&ed and reyne on his bedde, 
He seketh and seketh til he slepe drye. 
Piers Plowman (B), xvii. 319. 
unhinge (un-hinj'), v. t. 1. To take from the 
hinges : as, to unhinge a door. 
Paul's midnight voice prevail'd, his music's thunder 
Unhing'd the prison-doors, split bolts in sunder. 
Quartets, Emblems, v., Epig. 10. 
2. To displace; unfix by violence. 
Rather than not accomplish my revenge, 
Just or unjust, I would the world unhinge. Waller. 
3. To unsettle; loosen; render unstable or wa- 
vering; discompose; disorder: as, to unhinge 
the mind ; to unhinge opinions. 
Wingy mysteries in divinity, and airy subtleties in reli- 
gion, which have unhinged the brains of better heads. 
Sir T. Browne, Religio Medici, i. 9. 
unhingement (un-hinj'ment), n. The act of un- 
hinging, or the state of being unhinged. Imp. 
Diet. [Bare.] 
unb.ired (un-hlrd'), a. Not hired. Milton, 
Touching Hirelings. 
unhistoric (un-his-tor'ik), a. 1 . Not historic ; 
not containing or conveying history ; not being 
a part of recorded history; not noticed in his- 
tory; unrecorded. 
Through how many ages this unhistoric night of Euro- 
pean man may have preceded the dawn of civilisation it 
is at present vain to speculate. Eneyc. Brit., IL 342. 
2. Contrary to history. [Rare.] 
Under the influence of crude and unhistoric discussion 
of the subject . . . this conception of the American state 
has passed from the minds of large bodies of our people. 
Biblwtheca Sacra, XLVI. 545. 
Of Disraeli, in 1874, there is an equally speculative and 
unhistoric judgment. The Academy, Dec. 27, 1890, p. 606. 
unhistprical (un-his-tor'i-kal), a. Same as un- 
historic. 
Unhitch (un-hich'), v. t. To disengage from a 
hitch or fastening ; set free ; unfasten : as, to 
unhitch a horse. 
linhive (un-hiy'), v.t. 1. To drive from a hive. 
2. To deprive of habitation or shelter. 
6614 
unhoard (un-hord' ), v. t. To dissipate ; scatter. 
Milton, P. L., iv. 188. [Rare.] 
unholdH (uu-hold'), v. t. [< w-i + hohn.] To 
cease to hold ; let go the hold of. Otwuy. 
unhold' 2 t, [< ME. unhold, < AS. unhold (= 
OS. OHO. unhold), < un-, not, + hold, faithful: 
see hold?.] Unfavorable ; hostile. 
unholet, " A Middle English form of umchole. 
unholily (un-ho'li-li), adv. In an unholy man- 
ner. Jei: Taylor, Rule of Conscience, ii. 3. 
linholiness (un-ho'li-nes), n. The character or 
state of being unholy ; want of holiness. 
The unholiness of obtruding upon men remission of sins 
for money. Raleiyh. 
unholsomt, . A Middle English form of un- 
wholesome. 
unholy (un-ho'li), a. and n. I. a. Not holy. 
(a) Not sacred ; not hallowed or consecrated. 
Doth it follow that all things now in the church are 
unholy which the Lord himself hath not precisely insti- 
tuted? Hooker, Eccles. Polity. 
(b) Impious ; wicked. 
Blasphemers, disobedient to parents, unthankful, un- 
holy. 2 Tim. iii. 2. 
= Syn. (a) Unhallowed, unsanctifled. (b) Profane, un- 
godly. 
II. n. ; pi. unholies (-liz). That which is un- 
holy. [Rare.] 
How many other Unholies has your covering Art made 
holy, besides this Arabian Whinstone. 
Carlyle, Sartor Resartus. 
unhomogeneous (un-ho-mo-je'ne-us), a. Not 
homogeneous ; heterogeneous. 
unhomogeneousness (un-ho-mo-je'ne-us-nes), 
n. The character or state of being'unhomo- 
geneous; heterogeneousness. 
unhonestt (un-on'est), . [< ME. unhonest; < 
wi- 1 - + honest.] Dishonest; dishonorable; not 
virtuous ; unchaste. 
Whenne yee er sette, take noone vnhoneste tale. 
Babees Book (E. E. T. S.), p. 4. 
Then, lady, you must know, you are held unhonest ; 
The Duke, your brother, and yonr friends in court, 
With too much grief condemn you. 
Beau, and Fl., Woman-Hater, v. 5. 
unhonestlyt (un-on'est-li), adv. [< ME. un- 
lionestly ; < unhonest + -ly' 2 .] Dishonestly; im- 
properly ; unchastely. 
Speke neuer vnhonextly of woman kynde. 
Babees Book (E. E. T. S.), p. 3(16. 
unhonestyt (un-on'es-ti), . Dishonesty; im- 
propriety; improper conduct. 
Unhonesty hath ever present pleasure in it, having 
neither good pretence going before, nor yet any profit 
following after. Ascham, Toxophilus (ed. 1864), p. 39. 
unhonort, unhonourt (un-on'or),. t. [< ME. 
unhonouren; < un- 2 + honor.] To dishonor. 
I honoure my Fadir, and ye han unhonourid me. 
Wyclif, John viii. 
unhonored, unhonoured (un-on'ord), a. Not 
honored; not regarded with honor or venera- 
tion. 
"Unwept, unltonour'd, and unsung. 
Scott, L. of L. M., vi. 1. 
unheeded (un-hud'ed), . Not having or not 
covered with a hood. 
Up soars one falcon unhooded, while the other is drawn 
from its uncertain perch on the bead of the Arab to join 
the others. Harper's Mag., LXXVII. 82. 
unhook (un-huk'), r. t. To loose from a hook ; 
open or undo by detaching the hook or hooks of. 
unhoop (un-hop'), v. t. 1. To remove the hoops 
of, as a barrel or cask. 2. To remove the stiff 
petticoats or hoop-skirts of, as a woman : prob- 
ably jocose, and with allusion to def. 1. 
Unhoop the fair sex, and cure this fashionable tympany 
got among them. Addison. 
unhoped (un-hopf), . Not hoped or looked 
for ; unexpected ; not so probable as to excite 
hope. 
Whatsoevere thou mayst sen that is don in this world 
unhoped or unwenyd. Chaucer, Boethius, iv. prose 6. 
With unhop'd success. Dryden, ^neid, vii. 400. 
Unhoped-for, unhoped ; not hoped for. 
Unhopeful (un-hop'ful), a. Not hopeful ; leav- 
ing no room for hope ; hopeless. Shak., Much 
Ado, ii. 1. 392. 
unhopefully (un-hop'ful-i), adv. In an unhope- 
ful manner ; without hope ; hopelessly. Fort- 
niqhtly Bee., N. S., XLI. 833. 
unhorse (un-hors'), v. t. [< ME. unhorsen, on- 
horsen ; < un- 2 + horse.] 1. To throw or strike 
down from a horse ; cause to dismount or fall 
from the saddle. 
But the! were clene onliorsid in the feld. 
Generydes (E. E. T. S.), 1. 2404. 
He would unhorse the lustiest challenger. 
Shak., Rich. II., v. 3. 19. 
Uniat 
2. To deprive of a horse or horses ; remove the 
horse or horses from. [Rare.] 
Maidens wave 
Their kerchiefs, and old women weep for joy ; 
While others, not so satisfied, unhorse 
The gilded equipage, and, turning loose 
His steeds, usurp a place they well deserve. 
Cowper, Task, vi. 701. 
unhospitable (un-hos'pi-ta-bl), . Inhospita- 
ble. [Rare.] 
unhospitalt (un-hos'pi-tal), a. Inhospitable. 
Sandys, Travailes, p. 39. 
unhostile (un-hos'til), a. 1. Not hostile; 
friendly. 2. Not pertaining to or caused by 
an enemy. [Rare.] 
By unhostile wounds destroy'd. J. Philips, Blenheim. 
unhouse (un-houz'), v. t. 1. To drive from 
the house or habitation ; dislodge. Milton, On 
the Death of a Fair Infant, 1. 21. 2. To de- 
prive of shelter. Imp. Diet. 
unhoused (un-houzd'), a. 1. Not housed or 
sheltered as by a house : having no house or 
home. Whittier, Tent on the Beach. 2. De- 
prived of or driven from a house, home, roof, 
or shelter. Shak., T. of A., iv. 3. 229. 
unhouseledt, unhouselledt (un-hou'zeld), . 
Not having received the sacrament. 
Cut off even in the blossom of my sin, 
Unhowel'd, disappointed, unaneled. 
Shak., Hamlet, i. 6. 77. 
unhuman (un-hu'man), . 1. Not human; 
destitute of human qualities. S. L. Stevenson, 
Thoreau, IV. 2. Inhuman. [Rare.] 
Unhuman and remorseless cruelty. 
South, Sermons, XI. ii. 
unhumanize (un-hu'man-iz), v. t. [< unhuman 
+ -ize.] To cause to cease to be human ; de- 
prive or divest of the nature or characteristics 
of human beings. Huston. 
unhung (un-hung'), . 1. Not suspended; not 
hung. 2. Not hanged; unhanged. 
unhurt (uu-herf), a. [< ME. unhurt; <-! + 
hurt.] Not hurt ; not harmed ; free from injury. 
That y e Mayre and citezens haue alle their liberties and 
free vsage vnhurt. Arnold's Chro 
Through burning climes I 
A 
ran., p. 2. 
ised unhurt, 
on, Spectator, No. 489. 
unhurtful (un-hert'ful), a. Not hurtful; want- 
ing the power of doing harm or injury. Shale., 
M. for M., iii. 2. 175. 
unhurtfully (un-hert'ful-li), adv. Without 
harm ; harmlessly. Pope. 
unhurtfulness (un-hert'ful-nes),. Harmless- 
ness. 
Your unhurtefitlnes shall condemne theyr nnclennes. 
Udall, 1 Cor. vi. (Encyc. Diet.) 
unhusbanded (un-huz'ban-ded), . 1. Having 
no husband; unmarried; also, deprived of a 
husband ; widowed. 
With hanging head I have beheld 
A widow vine stand in a naked field, 
Unhusbanded, neglected, all forlorne. 
Broume, Britannia's Pastorals, ii. 5. 
2. Not managed with care or frugality ; uncul- 
tivated. 
The plains about are well-nigh overgrown with bushes 
and unhusbanded. Sandys, Travailes, p. 110. 
unhusbandingt (un-huz'ban-ding), n. [ME. 
unhusbondyng ; < un-i + husbanding.] Neglect 
to till; failure to cultivate. [Rare.] 
In housbonding is mysse, 
Unhusbondyny undooth fertilitee. 
Palladim, Husbondrie (E. E. T. S.), p. 11. 
unhusk (mi-husk'), v. t. To deprive of a husk, 
as corn ; hence, figuratively, to cause (a person) 
to reveal his thoughts or purposes ; cause to 
disclose. 
The Duke's sonne warily enqnir'd for me, 
Whose pleasure I attended ; he began 
By policy to open and unhuske me 
About the time and common rnmonr. 
C. Tourneur, Revenger's Tragedy, i. 1. 
uniarticulate (u'lii-ar-tik'n-lat), a. [< L. units, 
one (= E. one), + articulus, joint: see articu- 
late.] Having but one joint; single-jointed: 
opposed to ?>*-, tri-, or multi-articulate. 
Uniat, Uniate (ii'ni-at, -at), . and a. [< Russ. 
uniyatii, a united Greek, < L. units, one: see 
unite.] I. it. A member of one of those com- 
munities which have separated from one of 
the Oriental churches and submitted to the 
supremacy of the Pope, and to the doctrinal 
decisions of the Roman Church, while retain- 
ing their ancient liturgy, rites, discipline, or 
other of their distinctive usages to a greater or 
less extent, but with some important modifica- 
tions; specifically, one of the United Greeks. 
See miited. 
