unobjectionable 
unobjectionable (un-ob-jek'shon-a-bl), . Not 
liable to objection; incapable of being con- 
demned as faulty, false, or improper. Palcy, 
Evidences, iii. 6. 
imobjectionably (uu-ob-jek'shon-a-bli), adv. 
In an unobjectionable manner. 
unobnoxious (uB-ob-nok'shtw), a, 1. Not lia- 
ble; not subject; "not exposed. 
Guardians of Alcinous' gate 
Forever, unodnoafotci to decay. 
Cowper, Odyssey, viL 
2. Not obnoxious ; not offensive or hateful, 
unobsequiousness (un-ob-se'kwi-us-nes), n. 
The character or state of being incompliant; 
want of compliance. 
All unobseqiiiousness to the incogltancy. 
SirT. Browne, Vulg. Err. (Encyc. Diet.) 
unobservable (uu-ob-zer'va-bl), a. Incapable 
of being observed; not observable; not dis- 
coverable. Boyle, Works, I. 702. 
unobservance (un-ob-zer'vans), . 1. The state 
or character of being unobservant ; want of ob- 
servation; inattention. Whitlock, Manners of 
Eng. People, p. 419. 2. Lack of compliance 
with the requirements of some law, rule, or 
ceremony: as, the unobserrance of the pre- 
scribed forms of old law. 
unobservant (un-ob-zer'vant), a. 1. Not ob- 
servant; not attentive ; heedless: as, an unob- 
nervant traveler or reader. 
Au unexperienced and unobservant man. 
V. Knox, Essays, xc. 
2. Not careful to comply with what is pre- 
scribed or required: as, one unobservant of eti- 
quette. 3. Not obsequious. Imp. Diet. 
unobserved (un-ob-zervd'), a. Not observed; 
not noticed; not regarded; not heeded. 
Unobserved the glaring orb declines. 
Pope, Moral Essays, Epil. It. 
unobservedly (un-ob-zer'ved-li), adv. In an 
unobserved manner; without being observed. 
unobserving (un-ob-zer'ving), a. Not observ- 
ing; inattentive ; heedless. Waterland, Works, 
VI. 176. 
unobstructed (un-ob-struk'ted), a. Not ob- 
structed; not filled with impediments; not 
hindered or stopped ; clear: as, an unobstruct- 
ed stream or channel. Sir B. Blackmore, Crea- 
tion, iv. 
unobstructive (un-ob-struk'tiv), a. Not pre- 
senting any obstacle ; not obstructive, in any 
sense. Sir K. Blackmore, Creation, ii. 
unobtrusive (uu-ob-trb"siv), a. Not obtrusive ; 
not forward ; modest ; inconspicuous. 
We possess within our own city an instance of merit, as 
eminent as It is unobtrusive. 
K. Everett, Orations and Speeches, I. 324. 
unobtrusively (un-ob-tro'siv-li), adv. In an 
unobtrusive manner; not forwardly. 
unobtrusiveness (un-ob-tro'siv-nes), n. The 
character or state of being unobtrusive. 
unobviOUS (un-ob'vi-us), a. Not obvious, evi- 
dent, or manifest. Boyle, Works, II. 177. 
unoccupied (un-ok'u-pid), a. 1. Not occupied; 
not possessed: as, unoccupied land. N. Grew, 
Cosmologia Sacra. 2f. Not used; iiot made 
use of; unfrequented. 
This way of late had been much unoccupied, and was al- 
most all grown over with grass. 
Bunyan, Pilgrim's Progress, ii. 
3. Not employed or taken up in business or 
otherwise : as, unoccupied time. 
unode (u'nod), n. A conical point of a sur- 
face in which the tangent cone has degenerated 
to two coincident planes, so that infinitely near 
that point the surface has the form of a thin 
sheet cut off at an edge, both sides of the sheet 
being continuous with one side of the surface 
generally. Also called uniplanar node. 
unoffending (un-o-fen'ding), a. Not offending; 
not giving offense ; not sinning; free from sin 
or fault; harmless; innocent; blameless. 
My prayers pull daily blessings on thy head, 
My uno/tndinu child. 
Beau, and Ft., Laws of Candy, ii. 
unoffensive (un-o-fen'siv), a. Not offensive; 
harmless ; inoffensive. Up. Fell, Hammond, i. 
unofficious (un-o-fish'us), a. Not officious; not 
forward or intermeddling. Milton, Tetrachor- 
don. 
unoften (un-6'fn), adv. Not often; rarely. 
[Rare.] 
The man of gallantry not vnoflen has been found to 
think after the same manner. Harris, Three Treatises, ii. 
We have good reasons for believing that not unoften it 
Ithe archiepiscopal cross] bore on each of its two sides 
a fljinre of our Lord hanging nailed to the rood. 
Rock, Church of our Fathers, ii. 288. 
6632 
unpaired 
Unogatat (u-uo-ga'ta), ii.pl. [NL. (Fabricius, unoriginal (un-o-rij'i-nal), n. 1. Not original; 
1775). J In the Fab'ncian classification, a di- derived; adventitious; accidental. 2. Having 
vision of insects having only maxillary palpi, no origin or birth; ungenerated. 
including the dragon-flies, centipeds, and spi- Unoriginal night and chaos wild. Milton, P. L., x. 477. 
ders. unoriginate(un-o-rij'i-nat), a. [< MJi- 1 + *origi- 
04( -1 ! nate, a., < ML. originatns, pp. : see originate, r.} 
Not originated. 
Arius denied of Christ that He was unoriyinate, or part 
of the Unoriginate. Encyc. Brit., II. 637. 
unoil (un-oil'), . *. [< "- 2 
from oil. Drydeu. 
unoiled (un-oild'), a. Not oiled ; free from oil. 
Unoiled hinges. Young, Love of Fame, vi. 
unoldt (uu-61d'), v. t. [< w- 2 + old.] To make unoriginated (un-6-rij'i-na-ted), a. Not origi- 
youug; rejuvenate. uatea; having no birth or creation. 
Minde-gladding fruit that can unulde a man. fhe Father alone is self-existent, underived, unorigi- 
Sylvester, tr. of Du Bartas's Weeks, ii., The Schisme. nated. Waterland, Works, II. 348. 
Unona (u-no'na), n. [NL.(Linneeus filing, 1781); unoriginatedness (un-o-rij'i-na-ted-nes), ti. 
altered from NL. Anona, the name of a related The character or state of being unoriginated or 
genus.] A genus of plants, of the order Ano- without birth or creation. 
nacess, type of the tribe Vnonese. It differs from Self-existence or nnoriyinatednest. 
Asimina, the papaw of the United States, in its commonly Waterland, Works, III. 120. 
moniliform fruit, and from others of its tribe in its corolla ..... .. ,., , iir-ii, 
with flat open petals, and in having numerous ovules in UHOrigmately (un-0-rij'i-nat-li), (idr. Without 
a single series. The 25 species are natives of tropical birth or origin . 
He is so emphatically or unoriyinately. 
Waterland, Works, II. 211. 
Ing 6 inches in U. longiflora, a shrub of Assam. Their unomt, unomet, a. [ME., also mio 
young branches are often silky or velvety, with brown, *,.,.,. ' f /;.. , /H / )r ,,;,>t old 1 Old 
gray, golden, or reddish hairs, or, in U. Demos and U. *"*** < ln no l<M!), ola -J 
g 
gray, , 
iitouor, are covered with white dots or tubercles. Many 
species yield an aromatic bark and fruit, used as a stim- 
ulant and febrifuge. U. discolor, cultivated in India, 
and native also in China and the Malay archipelago, is a 
ith which the species have been much confused. unorthodoxy (un-6r'tho-dok-si), w. The state 
8 S ? v? )! *' P l~ [ n A ( ? e " tha a , nd or quality of being unorthodox ; unsoundness 
r, 1862), < Unona + -ex.] A tribe of poly- in f ^ ith heterodoxy ; heresy. [Rare.] 
iisrtlfl.nts. of tlie ordpr Aitonfinw. charac- 
%&$* 
Asia, "except 4 or 5 which are African. They are trees or 
shrubby climbers, usually with large flowers solitary in or 
near the axils, their petals often 2 or 3 inches long, reach- 
miounie, < AS. 
worn out; 
feeble. 
I waxe f eble and vnourne ; 
To flee to God is my beste way. 
Hymns to Virgin, etc. (E. E. T. S.), p. 70. 
small tree or shrub with polymorphous leaves, odorous .4.-1 /,,_ A. , on'ton n TVTnt r>v 
yellow flowers with silky petals in several varieties, and Unornamental (un-or-na-meu tal) a. Mot or- 
purple moniliform fruit with fleshy joints, resembling uamental. [rest, On the Resurrection, p. 660. 
small grapes; from the unripe fruit the Chinese make a unomamented (un-6r'na-men-ted), a. Not or- 
purple dye. U. viridiftora, a gigantic climber of Indian uamen ted ; unadorned : "not decorated ; plain. 
forests, is remarkable for the bright-green color of 1U rn ,.... fr .. pu;i, 1rlrl tn ti vf |p v 
large flowers. For the former U. hamata, now Artabotryt ( ouewfrw, i'nUemon to ilyae, V. 
odoratisaima, see tail-grape; for the former U. (now Co- unOrthodoX(un-or'tho-doks),. Not orthodox; 
nanga) odorata, see Cananga. See also Uvaria and Xy- heterodox; heretical. Decay of Christian Piety, 
luiria, with which the species have been much confused. 
Unonese(u-n" 
Hooker, 
petalous plants, of the order Anonaceee, charac- 
terized by flowers with densely crowded sta- 
mens and six valvate flattened or conniventpet- 
als in two rows, all nearly alike, or the inner unossified (un-os i-fid), a. Not ossified; not 
small or absent. It includes 16 genera, of which Uno- bony: specifically noting structures which usu- 
na is the type ; Asimina and Trigyneia are American, the ally become bone in the course of time, or in 
others natives mostly of tropical Asia or Africa. other cases. 
unoperative (un-op'e-ra-tiv), n. Inopera- unostentatious (un-os-ten-ta'shus), a. 1. Not 
tive. ostentatious; not boastful; not making show 
If the life of Christ be hid to this world, much more is O r parade ; modest. West, On the Resurrection. 
his Scepter nojwro<tw b^n^pintu^thinKs.^ ^ ^ _ 2- Not glaring; not showy: as, unostenta- 
""' e ' g i'-' ' tious coloring. 
unpperculate,unoperculated(un-9-per ku-lat, unostentatiously (un-os-ten-ta'shus-li), adv. 
-la-ted), . Inoperculate. j n an unostentatious manner; without show, 
unopposed (un-o-pozd'), a. Not opposed; not parade) O r ostentation. V. Knox. 
resisted ; not meeting with obstruction. unostentatiousness (un-os-ten-ta'shus-nes), . 
For what end was that bill to linger beyond the usual The state or character of being unostentatious, 
period of an unoppooed measure? or free from ostentation. 
Bur*,, Speech at Bristol, 1789. fl (un ^ d ') a . j. Not owed; not due. 
Unopposed Wow. See Mows. Not owned bavins no owner 
unoppressive (un-p-pres'iv), a. Not oppres- 
sive. Burke, L French Rev. 
uno-rail (u'no-ral), a. [Irreg. < L. unus, one, 
-I- E. rail 1 .] Characterized by a single rail: 
noting a traction system for ordinary wagons, 
England now is left 
To tug and scumble, and to part by the teeth 
oud-swelling state. 
in which a single rail is laid for the locomotive, 
which grasps it by means of paired driving- 
The unowed interest of proi 
Shak., K. John, iv. 8. 147. 
(un-6nd'), a. [< w- 2 + owned, pp. of 
own 1 .] Not owned; having no known owner; 
, ~ . -, _ - . i-k not claimed. Milton, Comus. 1. 407. 
wheels set almost horizontally. JS. H. Anight, unowned 2 (uii-ond'), . [< -! + owned, pp. 
unordamed(un-or-daud'),a. 1. Not ordained. of OM7 ,,2 ] Not avowed ; not acknowledged as 
2f. Inordinate. one , g own . not adm itt e d as done by one's self : 
The delyte that has uoghtc of unordaynde styrrynge, unconfessed: as, unowned faults. Gnw,Trivia,ii. 
and mckelyhas ^y^ta Criste^ f ^ ^.^ unpack (un-pak^.-t.. [< -* + pack.} 1. To 
unorder (un-6r'der), v. t. [< n- 2 + order.] 
To counterorder; countermand an order for. 
unpacker (un-pak'er), n. One who unpacks. 
I think I must unorder the tea. Miss Edgewortti, Ennui, iii. (Danes.) 
unpaid (un-pad'), a. 1. Not paid; not dis- 
charged, as a debt. Milton, P. L., v. 782. 2. 
Not having received what is due : as, unpaid 
workmen. 
open, as things packed : as, to unpack 
T ' o ^lieve of a pack or burden ; unload ; dis- 
unordered (un-6r'derd), a. [< ME. unordred 
(def. 2); < i-l + ordered.] 1. Not in or ar- 
ranged in order; disordered. 2. Not ordered 
or commanded. 3. Not belonging to a reli- 
gious order. [Rare.] 
Thow shalt considere . . . wheither thou be ... wed- 
ded or sengle, ordered or unordred. 
Chaucer, Parson's Tale. 
unorderly (un-6r'der-li), a. Not orderly; ir- 
regular; disorderly. Hooker, Eccles. Polity, 
iv. 4. 
unordinary (un-6r'di-na-ri), a. 
not common ; unusual. 
unordinatet, <. [ME., < jo*- 1 + ordinate.] In- no pain, 
ordinate. Wyelif, Ecclus. xlv. 9. An easy and unpainful touch. 
unordinatelyt, adv. [ME., < tinordinate + -ly' 2 .] Loeke < Htiinai 
If her armies are three years unpaid, she is the less ex- 
hausted by expense. Burke, State of the Nation. 
3. Serving without pay ; uusalaried : as, 
justices Unpaid-for, not paid for. 
Prouder than rustling in unpaid-for silk. 
Shak., Cymbeline, iii. 3. 24. 
unpained (un-pand'), a. Not pained; suffering 
Not ordinary; no pain. B. Jonson, Cynthia's Revels, v. 3. 
unpainful (un-pan'ful)j a. Not painful ; giving 
rnderstanding, ii. 4. 
Inordinately. Wyclif, 2 Thess. iii. 6. unpaint (un-panf), r. *. [< w-2 + paint.] T<. 
unorganized (un-6r'gan-izd), a. Not organ- efface the painting or color of. ritriicll. 
ized; inorganized; inorganic: as, metals are unpaired (un-pard'), a. Not paired, in anv 
iniorufiniseii bodies. Locke, Human Under- sense. -Unpaired fins, of fishes the vertical flns-'- 
standing, ii. 30. namely, the dorsal, anal, and i-amlal. 
