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UNDISCER'NIBLENESS, s. State or quality of being 
undiscernible.—Because of their remoteness, subtilty, and 
undiscernibleness, it cannot know them adequately, or in 
the whole. Ellis. 
UNDISCE'RNIBLY, adv. Invisibly; imperceptibly.— 
Many secret indispositions will undiscernibly steal upon the 
soul, and it will require time and close application to recover 
it to the spiritualities of religion. South. 
UNDISCE'RNING, adj. Injudicious; incapable of 
making due distinction.—His long experience informed him 
well of the state of England; but of foreign transactions, 
he was entirely undiscerning and ignorant. Clarendon. 
UNDISCIPLINED, adj. Not subdued to regularity and 
order. 
Divided from those climes where art prevails; 
Undisciplin'd by precepts of the wise; 
Our inborn passions will not brook controul; 
We follow nature. Philips. 
Untaught.; uninstructed.—A gallant man had rather fight 
to great disadvantages in the field, in an orderly way, than 
skuffle with an undisciplined rabble. King Charles. 
To UNDISCLO'SE, v. a. Not to discover; not to un¬ 
fold. 
The half-blown rose— 
Whilst yet her tender bud doth undisclose 
That full of beauty time bestow's upon her. Daniel. 
UNDISCO'RDING, adj. Not disagreeing; not jarring 
in music. 
We on earth, with undiscording voice. 
May rightly answer that melodious noise; 
As once we did, till disproportion^ sin 
Jarr’d against nature’s chime. Milton. 
UNDISCO'VERABLE, adj: Not to be found out.—He 
was to make up his accounts, and by an easy, undiscover- 
able cheat, he could provide against the impending distress. 
Rogers. 
UNDISCO'VERED, adj. Not seen; not descried; 
not found out. 
Time glides, with undiscover'd haste; 
The future but a length behind the past. Dry den. 
UNDISCRE'ET, adj. Not wise; imprudent.—If thou 
be among the undiscreet, observe the time. Ecclus. 
UNDISCRE'ETLY, adv. Improvidently; unwisely.— 
They have undiscreetly impoverished themselves. Burton. 
UNDISGUI'SED, adj. Open; artless; plain; exposed 
to view. 
If thou art Venus, 
Disguis’d in habit, undisguis'd in shape; 
O help us captives from our chains t’ escape. Dryden. 
UNDISHONOURED, adj. Not dishonoured. 
Keep then fair league and truce with thy true bed : 
I live distain’d, thou undishonoured. Shakspeare. 
UNDISMA'YED, adj. Not discouraged; not depressed 
with fear.—He in the midst thus undismay'd began. Mil- 
ton. 
Though oft repuls’d, again 
They rally undismay'd. Philips. 
UND'ISOBLIGING, adj. Inoffensive.—All this he 
would have expatiated upon, wilh connexions of the dis¬ 
courses, and the most easy, undisobliging transitions. 
Broome. 
UNDISPE'RSED, adj. Not scattered.—We have all 
the redolence of the perfumes we burn upon his altars; the 
smoke doth vanish ere it can reach the sky ; and whilst it is 
undispersed, it but clouds it. Boyle. 
UNDISPO'SED, adj. Not bestowed.—The employ¬ 
ments were left undisposed of, to keep alive the hopes of im¬ 
patient candidates. Sw/ft. 
UNDISPU'TABLE, adj. Not to be disputed.—Their 
ideas and descriptions were undisputable. Whitlock .— 
Merely for his undisputable good pleasure. Cowley. 
, Vol. XXIV. No. 1648. 
UNDISPU'TED, adj. Incontrovertible; evident.—You, 
by an undisputed title, are the king of poets. Dryden. 
' UNDISSE'MBLED, adj. Openly declared. 
Let the tender swain 
Each morn regale on nerve-relaxing tea, 
Companion meet of languor-loving nymph: 
Be mine each morn, with eager appetite 
And hunger undissembled , to repair 
To friendly buttery ; there on smoking crust 
And foaming ale to banquet unrestrain’d. 
Material breakfast. Wart on. 
UNDISSE'MBLING, adj. Not dissembling; never 
false. 
They lov’d ; but such their guiltless passion was, 
As in the dawn of time inform’d the heart 
Of innocence and undissemb/ing truth. Thomson. 
UNDI'SSIPATED, adj. Not scattered ; not dispersed.— 
Such little primary masses as our proposition mentions, may 
remain undissipated. Boyle. 
UNDISSO'LVABLE, adj. That cannot be dissolved or 
melted.—Through the power of the hot sun and parching 
sand they are so drv’d, that they become fixed, and for ever 
undissolvable. Greenhill. —That may not be loosed or 
broken. 
And would you have my partial friendship break 
That holy knot, which, tied once, all mankind 
Agree to hold sacred, and undissolvable ? Rowe. 
UNDISSO'LVED, adj. Not melted. 
On the flood 
Indurated and fix’d the snowy weight 
Lies undissolv'd. Cowper. 
UNDISSO'LVING, adj. Never melting. 
Not cold Scythia's undissolving snows. 
Nor the parch’d Lybian sands thy husband bore. 
But mild Parthenope. Addison. 
UNDISTE'MPERED, adj. Free from disease. Free 
from perturbation.—Some such laws may be considered, in 
some parliament that shall be at leisure, from the urgency of 
more pressing affairs, and shall be cool and undistempered. 
Temple. 
UNDISTINGUISHABLE, adj. Not to be distinctly 
seen. 
These things seem small and u.r,distinguishable. 
Like far off mountains turned into clouds. Shakspeare. 
Not to be known by any peculiar property.—No idea can 
be undistinguishable from another, from which it ought to 
be different. Locbe. 
UNDISTI'NG UISHABLY, adv. Without distinction ; 
so as not to be known from each other ; so as not separately 
and plainly descried.—The righteous and bountiful persons 
are, in scripture expression, ordinarily confounded, as it 
were, or undistinguishably put one for the other. Barrow. 
UNDISTINGUISHED, adj. Not marked out So as to 
be known from each other. 
The undistinguish'd seeds of good and ill, 
Heaven in his bosom from our knowledge hides. Dryden. 
Not to be seen otherwise than confusedly ; not separately 
and plainly descried. 
’Tis like the milky way, all over bright; 
But sown so thick with stars, ’tis undistinguish'd light. 
Dryden. 
Not plainly discerned. 
Wrinkles undistinguish'd pass. 
For I’m ashamed to use a glass. Swift. 
Admitting nothing between; having no intervenient 
space.—Oh undistinguish'd space of woman’s will! Shak¬ 
speare. —Not marked by any particular property. 
Sleep to those empty lids 
Is grown a stranger ; and day and night 
As undistinguish'd by my sleep as sight. Denham. 
4 S Not 
