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every one here that you know: mankind is unamendable. 
Pope. 
UNA'MIABLE, ad]. Not raising love.'—These men are 
so well acquainted with the unamiable part of themselves, 
that they have not the confidence to think they are really 
beloved. Addison. 
UNAMU'SED, adj, Wanting amusement; without 
amusement. 
O ye Lorenzos of our age, who deem 
One moment unamus'd a misery, 
Not made for feeble man ! Young. 
UNANALO'GICAL, adj. Not analogical.—Shine is a 
[substantive,] though not unanalogical, yet ungraceful, and 
little used. Johnson. 
UNA'NALYSED, adj. Not resolved into simple parts.— 
Some large crystals of refined and unanalysed nitre, ap¬ 
peared to have each of them six flat sides. Boyle. 
UNA'NCHORED, adj. Not anchored. 
A port there is, inclos’d on either side, 
Where ships may rest unanchor'd , and unty’d. Pope. 
UNANE'LED, adj. Not having received extreme unction. 
See To Anele. 
Thus was I, sleeping, by a brother’s hand 
Cut off, ev’n in the blossoms of my sin, 
Unhousel’d, disappointed, unanel'd. Skakspeare. 
UN A'NIMATED, adj. Not enlivened; not vivified.— 
Look on those half lines as the imperfect products of a hasty 
muse : like the frogs in the Nile, part kindled into life, and 
part a lump of uninformed, unanimated matter. Dry den. 
UNANI'MITY, s. [ unanimite , Fr.] Agreement in design 
or opinion.—An honest party of men acting with unanimity, 
are of infinitely greater consequence, than the same parly 
Riming at the same end by different views. Addison. 
UNA'NIMOUS, adj. [ unanimis , Lat.] Being of one 
mind 5 agreeing in design or opinion. 
They wont to meet 
So oft in festivals of joy, and love 
Unanimous, as sons of one great sire, 
Hymning th’ eternal Father. Milton. 
UNA'NIMOUSLY, adv. With one mind.—This parti¬ 
cular is unanimously reported by all the ancient Christian 
authors. Addison. 
UNA'NIMOUSNESS, s. The state of being unanimous. 
UNANO'INTED, adj. Not anointed. Dr. Johnson adds, 
Not prepared for death by extreme unction. 
UNANSWERABLE, adj. Not to be refuted.—'This is a 
manifest and unanswerable argument. Ralegh. 
UNANSWERABLY, adv. Beyond confutation.—It will 
put their little logic hard to it to prove that there can be 
any obedience, where there is no command. And therefore 
it unanswerably follows, that the abettors of the fore-men¬ 
tioned principle plead conscience in a direct and bare-faced 
contradiction to God’s express command. South. 
UNANSWERED, adj. Not opposed by a reply. 
Mast I tamely bear 
This arrogance unanswered ! Thou’rt a traitor. Addison. 
Not confuted.—All these reasons, they say, have been 
brought, and were hitherto never answer’d ; besides a number 
of merriments and jests unanswer'd likewise. Hooker. — 
Not suitably returned. 
Quench, Corydon, thy long unanswer'd fire; 
Mind what the common wants of life require. Dryden. 
UNAPPA'LLED, adj. Not daunted; not impressed by 
fear. 
If my memory must thus be thralled 
To that strange stroke, which conquered all my senses; 
Can thoughts still thinking so rest unappalled ? Sidney. 
UNAPPA'RELLED, adj. Not dressed ; not clothed.— 
In Peru, though they were an unapparelled people, and had 
some customs very barbarous, yet the government of the 
Incas had many parts of civility. Bacon. 
UNAPPA'RENT, adj. Obscure; not visible. 
Thy potent voice he hears. 
And longer will delay to hear thee tell 
His generation and the rising birth 
Of nature, from the unapparent deep. Milton. 
UNAPPEALABLE, adj. Not admitting appeal.-—They 
made their own reason, or rather humour (first surnaming it 
the spirit), the infallible, unappealable judge of all that was 
delivered in the written word. South. 
UNAPPEASABLE, adj. Not to be pacified; implacable. 
I see thou art implacable; more deaf 
To prayers than winds to seas; yet winds to seas 
Are reconcil’d at length, and seas to shore. 
Thy anger, unappeasable , still rages. 
Eternal tempest, never to be calm’d. Milton. 
UNAPPEASED, adj. Not pacified. 
Sacrifice his flesh, 
That so the shadows be not unappeased. Shakspeare. 
UNA'PPLICABLE, adj. Such as cannot be applied.—■ 
Gratitude, by being confined to the few, has a very narrow 
province to work on, being acknowledged tob eunapplicabte, 
and so consequently ineffectual to all others. Hammond. 
UNAPPLl'ED, adj. Not specially applied; not engaged. 
—They were men dedicated to a private, free, unapplied 
course of life. Bacon. 
UNAPPREHENDED, adj. Not understood.—They of 
whom God is altogether unapprehended, are but few in num¬ 
ber, and for grossness of wit such that they hardly seem to 
hold the place of human being. Hooker. 
UNAPPREHE'NSIBLE, adj. Not capable of being un¬ 
derstood.'—-Which assertions leave it unapprehensible what 
place can reasonably be left for addressing exhortations to the 
will.— South. 
UNAPPREHENSIVE, adj. Not intelligent; not ready 
of conception.—-The same temper of mind makes a man un¬ 
apprehensive and insensible of any misery suffered by others. 
South, —Not suspecting. 
UNAPPRFSED, adj. Not uninformed; not ignorant. 
Some mischievously weep, not unappris'd. 
Tears sometimes aid the conquest of an eye. Young 
UN APPRO A'CHABLE, adj. That may not be ap¬ 
proached.—The ambitious daring approaches of the soul to¬ 
ward the unapproachable light. Hammond. 
UN APPRO A'CHED, adj. Inaccessible. 
God is light, 
And never but in unapproached light 
Dwelt from eternity. Milton. 
UNAPPROPRIATED, adj. Having no particular ap¬ 
plication.-—Ovid could not restrain the luxuriancy of his ge¬ 
nius, on the same occasion, from wandering into an endless 
variety of flowery and unappropriated similitudes, and 
equally applicable to any other person or place. Dr. IVarton. 
UNAPPRO'VED, adj. Not approved. 
Evil into the mind 
May come and go so unapprov'd, and leave 
No spot behind. Milton. 
UNAPT, adj. Dull; not apprehensive.-—The contrary 
advantage, in natures very dull and unapt , of working ala¬ 
crity, by framing an exercise with some delight or affection. 
Bacon. —Not ready; not prepense. — I am a soldier and 
unapt to weep. Shalspeare.— Unfit; not qualified: with 
to before a verb, for before a noun.—Fear doth grow from 
an apprehension of deity indued with irresistible power to 
hurt; aud is, of all affections (anger excepted) the unaptest 
to admit any conference with reason. Hooker .—Improper; 
unfit; unsuitable. 
UNAPTLY, adv. Unfitly; improperly.—He swims on 
his back ; and the shape of his back seems to favour it, being 
very like the bottom of a boat: nor do his hinder legs unaptly 
resemble a pair of oars. Grew. 
UNAPTNESS, s. Unfitness; unsuitableness.—Men’s 
apparel 
