U N C 
unconducted troop of atoms ambling up and down con¬ 
fusedly through the field of infinite space, what might he 
not as easily assert, or admit? Barrow. 
UNCONFl'NABLE, adj. Unbounded.—You rogue ! 
you stand upon your honour! why, thou unconjinable 
baseness, it is as much as I can do to keep mine honour. 
Sha/cspeare. 
UNCONFI'NED, adj. Free from restraint. 
I wonder at it. 
That shews thou art unconfin'd. Shakspearc. 
Having no limits; unbounded. 
Blest with a taste exact, yet unconfin'd; 
A knowledge both of books and human kind. Pope. 
UNCONFI'NEDLY, ado. Without limitation; with¬ 
out confinement.—In this way any man is able to benefit 
all, or unconfinedly to oblige mankind. Barrow. 
UNCONFIRMED, adj. Not fortified by resolution; 
not strengthened ; raw; weak. 
The unexpected speech 
The king had made upon the new rais’d force, 
In lh’ unconfirm'd troops, much fear did breed. Daniel. 
Not strengthened by additional testimony. 
He would have resign’d 
To him his heavenly office, nor was long 
His witness unconfirm'd. Milton. 
Not settled in the church by the rite of confirmation. 
UNCONFO'RM, adj. Unlike; dissimilar; not analo¬ 
gous.—Not unconform to other shining globes. Milton. 
UNCONFO'RM ABLE, adj. Inconsistent; not conform¬ 
ing.—Unto those general rules, they know we do not 
defend, that we may hold any thing unconformable. 
Hooker. 
UNCONFORMITY, s. Incongruity ; inconsistency.— 
The moral goodness or evil of men’s actions, which consist 
in their conformity or unconformity to right reason, must be 
eternal, necessary, and unchangeable. South. 
UNCONFU'SED, adj. Distinct; free from confusion. 
—It is more distinct and unconfused than the sensitive me¬ 
mory. Hale. 
UNCONFU'SEDLY, ado. Without confusion.—Every 
one finds that he knows, when any idea is in his under¬ 
standing, and that, when more than one are there, he knows 
them, distinctly and unconfusedly, from one another. 
Locke. 
UNCONFU'TABLE, adj. Irrefragable; not to be con¬ 
victed of error.—One political argument they boasted of as 
unconfutable , that from the marriages of ecclesiasticks, 
would ensue poverty in many of the children, and thence a 
disgrace and burden to the church. Sprat. 
UNCONGF.'ALED, adj. Not concreted by cold.—By 
exposing wine, after four months’ digestion in horse-dung, 
unto the extremity of cold, the aqueous parts will freeze, but 
the spirit retire, and be found uncongealed in the center. 
Brown. 
UNCO'NJUGAL, adj. Not consistent with matrimo¬ 
nial faith; not befitting a wife or husband. 
My name 
To all posterity may stand defam’d; 
With malediction mention’d, and the blot 
Of falsehood most unconjugal traduc’d. Milton. 
UNCONNECTED, adj. Not coherent; not joined by 
proper transitions or dependence of parts; lax; loose; vague. 
—Those who contemplate only the fragments broken off 
from any science, dispersed in short, unconnected discourses, 
can never survey an entire body of truth. Watts. 
UNCONNI'VING, adj. Not forbearing penal notice. 
To that hideous place not so confin’d, 
By rigour unconniving; but that oft 
Leaving my dolorous prison, I enjoy 
Large liberty, to round this globe of earth. Milton. 
U N C 43l 
UNCON'QUERABLE, adj. Not to be subdued; insu¬ 
perable; not to be overcome; invincible.—Louis was darting 
his thunder on the Alps, and causing his enemies to feel the 
force of his unconquerable arms. Dryden. 
UNCO'NQUERABLY, adv. Invincibly ; insuperably. 
The herds of Iphyelus, detain’d in wrong; 
Wild, furious herds, unconquerably strong. Pope. 
UNCO'NQUERED, adj. Not subdued; not overcome. 
Unconquer'd yet, in that forlorn estate. 
His manly courage overcame his fate. Dryden. 
Insuperable; invincible. 
What was that snaky-headed gorgon shield. 
That wise Minerva wore, unconquer'd virgin! 
Wherewith she freez’d her foes to congeal’d stone, 
But rigid looks and chaste austerity, 
And noble grace, that dash’d brute violence, 
With sudden adoration and blank awe? Milton. 
UNCO'NSCIONABLE, adj. Exceeding the limits of any 
just claim or expectation.—-A man may oppose an uncon¬ 
scionable request for an unjustifiable reason. L'Estrange. 
—Forming unreasonable expectations.—You cannot be so 
unconscionable as to charge me for not subscribing of my 
name, for that would reflect too grossly upon your own 
party, who never dare it. Dryden. —Enormous; vast. A 
low word. 
His giantship is gone somewhat crest-fall’n, 
Stalking with less unconscionable strides, 
And lower looks, but in a sultry chafe. Milton. 
Not guided or influenced by conscience.—How infamous 
is the false, fraudulent, and unconscionable ? Hardly ever 
did any man of no conscience continue a man of any credit 
long. South. 
UNCO'NSCIONABLENESS, t. Unreasonableness of 
hope or claim. 
UNCO'NSCIONABLY, adv. Unreasonably, 
This is a common vice; though all things here 
Are sold, and sold unconscionably dear. Dryden. 
UNCO'NSCIOUS, adj. Having no mental perception. 
Unconscious causes only still impart 
Their utmost skill, their utmost power exert: 
Those which can freely chuse, discern, and know, 
Can more or less of art and care bestow. Blackmore. 
Unacquainted; unknowing. 
A yearling bullock to thy name shall smoke, 
Untam’d, unconscious of the galling yoke. Pope. 
To UNCO'NSECRATE, v.a. To render not sacred; to 
desecrate.—Heaven must be unconsecrated by such vio¬ 
lence. Hammond. 
UNCONSE'NTING, adj. Not yielding.—Nor uncon¬ 
senting hear his friend’s request. Pope. 
UNCONSE'NTED, adj. Not yielded.—We should ex¬ 
tend it even to the weakness of our natures, to our proneness 
to evil: for however these, unconsented to, will not be im¬ 
puted to us, yet are they matter of sorrow. Wake. 
UNCONSI'DERED, adj. Not considered; not attended 
to. 
Love yourself; and in that love, 
Not unconsidered leave your honour. Shakspeare. 
UNCO'NSONANT, adj. Incongruous; unfit; incon¬ 
sistent.—It seemeth a thing unconsonant, that the world 
should honour any other as the Saviour, but him whom it 
honoureth as the Creator of the world. Hooker. 
UNCONSPI'RINGNESS, s. Absence of plot or conspi¬ 
racy.—A harmony, whose dissonances serve but to manifest 
the sincerity and unconspiringness of the writers. Boyle. 
UNCO'NSTANT, adj. \inconstans, Lat.] Fickle; not 
steady; changeable; mutable. 
More unconstant than the wind; who woos 
Ev’n 
