UNA 
UNA 
419 
Madam, I have unadvis'd 
Deliver’d you a paper lhat I should not. Shakspeare. 
Done without due thought 5 rash. 
This contract to-night 
Is too rash, too unadvis'd, too sudden. 
Too like the light’ning, which doth cease to be, 
Ere one can say, it lightens. Shakspeare. 
UNADVISEDLY, adv. Imprudently; rashly; indis¬ 
creetly.-—-A strange kind of speech unto Christian ears; and 
such, as I hope they themselves do acknowledge unadvisedly 
uttered. Hooker. 
What is done cannot be now amended; 
Men shall deal unadvisedly sometimes, 
Which alter-hours give leisure to repent of. Shakspeare. 
UNADVI'SEDNESS, s. Imprudence; rashness. 
I thought one man enough to match with ten ; 
And through this careless unadvisedness 
I was destroy’d. Mir. for Mag. 
UNADU'LTERATE, or Unadulterated, adj. Ge¬ 
nuine ; not spoiled by spurious mixtures.-—I have only dis¬ 
covered one of those channels, by which the history of our 
Saviour might be conveyed pure and unadulterated. Ad¬ 
dison. 
UNADU'LTERATELY, adv. Without spurious mix¬ 
tures.-—Inductions fresh and un adulter at ely drawn from 
those observations. Dr. Gilberte. 
UNAFFE'CTED, adj. Real; not hypocritical. 
They bore the king 
To lie in solemn state, a public sight: 
Groans, cries, and howlings fill the crowded place. 
And unaffected sorrow sat on ev’ry face. Drydcn. 
Free from affectation ; open; candid; sincere. 
The maid improves her charms. 
With inward greatness, unaffected wisdom, 
And sanctity of manners. Addison. 
Not formed by too rigid observation of rules; not laboured. 
Men divinely taught, and better teaching 
The solid rules of civil government, 
In their majestic, unaffected stile. 
Than all the oratory of Greece and Rome. Milton. 
Not moved; not touched: as, he sat unaffected to hear 
the tragedy. 
UNAFFE'CTEDLY, adv. Really; without any attempt 
to produce false appearances.-—He was always unaffectedly 
cheerful; no marks of any thing heavy at his heart broke 
from him. Locke. 
UNAFFE'CTING, adj. Not pathetic; not moving the 
passions.-—This stately sort of declamation, whatever elo¬ 
quence it may display, and whatever policy it may teach, is 
undramatic, unanimated, and unaffecting. TVarton. 
UNAFFE'CTIONATE, adj. Wanting affection.—A 
helpless, un affect ion ate, and sullen mass, whose very com- 
pany represents the visible and exactest figure of loneliness 
itself. Milton. 
UNAFFLI'CTED, adj. Free from trouble. 
My unafflicted mind doth feed 
On no unholy thoughts for benefit. Daniel. 
UNAGREE'ABLE, adj. Inconsistent; unsuitable. 
Adventurous work ! yet to thy power and mine 
Not unagreeable, to found a path 
Over this main, from hell to that new world. Milton. 
UNAGREE'ABLENESS, s. Unsuitahleness to; incon¬ 
sistency with.—Papias, a holy man, and scholar of St. John, 
having delivered the millennium, men chose rather to admit 
a doctrine, whose unagreeableness to the gospel economy 
rendered it suspicious, than think, an apostolic man could 
seduce them. Dec. of Chr. Piety. 
UNAI'DABLE, adj. Not to be helped. 
The congregated college have concluded, 
That labouring art can never ransom nature 
From her unaidable estate. Shakspeare. 
UNAIDED, adj. Not assisted ; not helped. 
Their number, counting those th’ unaided eye 
Can see, or by invented tubes descry. 
The widest stretch of human thought exceeds. Blackmore. 
UNARMING, adj. Having no particular direction. 
The noisy culverin, o’ercharg’d, lets fly, 
And bursts, unaiming , in the rended sky; 
Such frantic flights are like a madman’s dream. 
And nature suffers in the wild extreme. Granville. 
UN AKA, a chain of mountains in North America, 
between the states of Tennessee and North Carolina. 
UNA'KING, adj. Not feeling or causing pain. 
Shew them th’ uvaking scars which I would hide, 
As if I had receiv’d them for the hire 
Of their breath only. Shakspeare. 
UNALA'RMED, adj. Not disturbed. 
One shelter’d hare 
Has never heard the sanguinary yell 
Of cruel man, exulting in her woes. 
Innocent partner of my peaceful home, 
Whom ten long years experience of my care 
Has made at last familiar, she has lost 
Much of her vigilant instinctive dread, 
Not needful here, beneath a roof like mine. 
Yes —• thou mayst eat thy bread, and lick the hand 
That feeds thee; thou may’st frolic on the floor 
At evening, and at night retire secure 
To thy straw couch, and slumber unalarmed. Cowper. 
UNA'LIENABLE, adj. Not to be transferred.—Here¬ 
ditary right should be kept sacred, not from any unalienable 
right in a particular family, but to avoid the consequences 
that usually attend the ambition of competitors. Sivft. 
UNALGA, one of the Fox islands; 15 miles south-east 
of Unalaska. 
UNALLAYED, adj. Not impaired by bad mixtures.—- 
TJnallayed satisfactions are joys too heavenly to fall to many 
men’s shares on earth. Boyle. 
UNALLI'ED, adj. Having no powerful relation.-—Nar- 
cissa, not unknown, not unallied. Young. —Having no 
common nature; not congenial.—He is compounded of two 
very different ingredients, spirit and matter ; but how such 
unallied and disproportioned substances should act upon 
each other, no man’s learning yet could tell him. Collier. 
UNALTERABLE, adj. Unchangeable; immutable.— 
The law of nature, consisting in a fixed, unalterable relation 
of one nature to another, is indispensable. South. 
UNALTERABLENESS, s. Immutability ; unchange¬ 
ableness.—This happens from the unalterableness of the 
corpuscles, which constitute and compose those bodies. 
Woodward. 
UNALTERABLY, adv. Unchangeably; immutably.— 
Retain unalterably firm his love intire. Milton. 
UNALTERED, adj. Not changed; not changeable.— 
It was thought in him an unpardonable offence to alter any 
thing; in us intolerable that we suffer any thing to remain 
unaltered. Hooker. 
UNAMA'ZED, adj. Not astonished; free from astonish¬ 
ment. 
Though at the voice much marvelling; at length, 
Not unamaz'd , she thus in answer spake. Milton. 
UNAMBIGUOUS, adj. Clear; not to be mistaken; 
unquestionable—Every paragraph should be so clear and 
unambiguous, that the dullest lellow in the world may not 
be able to mistake it. Ld. Chesterfield. 
UNAMBITIOUS, adj. Free from ambition.—I am one 
of those unambitious people, who will love you forty years 
hence. Pope . 
UNAME'NDABLE, adj. [ inemendabilis , Lat.] Not 
to be changed for the better.-—He is the same man ; so is 
every 
