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but two horses left uneaten , they had never suffered a sum¬ 
mons to be sent to them. Clarendon 
UNE'ATH, adv. [from un and eaS, Saxon, easyl] —Not 
easily. Out o f use. 
Uneath may she endure the flinty street, 
To tread them with her tender feeling feet. Shakspeare. 
It seems once in Spenser to signify the same as beneath : 
under; below; 
A roaring, hideous sound. 
That all fhe air with terror filled wide. 
And seem’d uneath to shake the stedfast ground. Spenser. 
UNF.'DIFYING, adj. Not improving in good life.— 
Our practical divinity is as sound and affecting, as that of our 
popish neighbours is flat and unedifying. Atterhury. 
UNE'DUCATE, or Une'ducatkd, adj. Not having 
received education.—O harsh uneducate, illiterate peasant! 
Trag. of Solyman and Pers. —As the multitude of poor 
and necessitous and uneducated persons increase, the mul¬ 
titude of malefactors increase. Hale. 
UNEFFE'CTUAL, adj. Having no effect. 
The glow-worm shows the matin to be near, 
And ’gins to pale his uneffectual fire. Shakspeare. 
UNELE'CTED, adj. Not chosen. 
Putting him to rage 
You should have ta’en the advantage of hischoler, 
And pass’d him unelected. Shakspeare. 
UNE'LIGIBLE, adj. Not proper to be chosen.—Both 
extremes, above or below the proportion of our character, are 
dangerous ; and ’tis hard to determine which is most uneli- 
gible. Itogers. 
UNEMPLOYED, adj. Not busy; at leisure; idle. 
Other creatures all day long, 
Rove idle, unemploy'd , and less need rest. Milton. 
Not engaged in any particular work. 
Pales unhonour’d, Ceres unemploy'd. 
Were all forgot. Dry den. 
UNE'MPTIABLE, adj. Not to be emptied ; inexhaust¬ 
ible. Obsolete. —Whatsoever men or angels know, it is as 
a drop of that unemptiable fountain of wisdom, which hath 
diversly imparted her treasures. Hooker. 
UNENCIIA'NTED, adj. That cannot be enchanted. 
Beauty, like the fair Hesperian tree 
Laden with blooming gold, had need the guard 
Of dragon-watch with unenchanted eye, 
To save her blossoms, and defend her fruit, 
From the rash hand of bold incontinence. Milton. 
UNENDE'ARED, adj. Not attended with endearment. 
Here love his golden shafts employs, here lights 
His constant lamp, and waves his purple wings; 
Reigns here and revels ; not in the bought smiles 
Of harlots, loveless, joyless, unendear'd. Milton. 
UNENDOWED, adj. Not invested ; not graced.—A 
man rather unadorned with any parts of quickness, and unen¬ 
dowed with any notable virtues, than notorious for any 
defect of understanding. Cfarendon. 
UNENGA'GED, adj. Not engaged ; not appropriated. 
—When we have sunk the only unengaged revenues left, 
our incumbrances must remain perpetual. Swift. 
UNENJO'YED, adj. Not obtained; not possessed. 
Each day’s a mistress unenjoy'd before ; 
Like travellers, we’re pleas’d with seeing more. Thy den. 
UNENJO'YING, adj. Not using; having no fruition. 
The more we have, the meaner is our store; 
The unenjoying, craving wretch is poor. Creech. 
UNENLA'RGED, adj. Not enlarged; narrow; con¬ 
tracted.— Unenlarged souls are disgusted with the wonders 
which the microscope has discovered concerning the shape 
of little animals, which equal not a pepper-corn. Watts. 
UNENLI'GHTENED, adj. Not illuminated—Moral 
virtue natural reason, unenlightened by revelation, pre¬ 
scribes. Atterhury. 
U N E 
UNENSLA'VED, adj. Free; not enthralled. 
By thee 
She sits a sov’reign, unenslav'd and free. Addison. 
j'o UNENTA'NGLE, v. a. To free from perplexity or 
difficulty ; to disentangle —O my God, how dost thou un- 
entangle me in any scruple arising out of the consideration 
of this thy fear. Donne. 
UNENTERTA'INING, adj. Giving no delight; giving 
no entertainment.—It was not unentertaining to observe by 
what degrees I ceased to be a witty writer. Pope. 
UNEN'l’ERTA'ININGNESS, s. That which affords no 
entertainment.—Last post I received a very diminutive let¬ 
ter; it made excuses for its unehtertainingness, very little 
to the purpose. Gray. 
UNENTHRA'LLED, adj. Unenslaved.—It must needs 
be ridiculous to any judgment unenthralled. Milton. 
UNENTO'MBED, adj. Unburied ; uninterred.—Think’st 
thou un entomb'd to cross the floods? Dry den. 
UNE'NVIED, adj. Exempt from envy.—The fortune, 
which no body sees, makes a man happy and unenvied. 
Bacon. 
UNE'QUABLE, adj. Different from itself; diverse.— 
March and September, the two equinoxes, are the most un¬ 
settled and unequable of seasons. Bentley. 
UNE'QUAL, adj. [inasqualis , Latin.]—Not even.— 
You have here more than one example of Chaucer’s unequal 
numbers. Dryden. —Not equal; inferior.—Among un- 
equals, whM society} Milton. —Partial; not bestowing on 
both thesame advantages. 
When to conditions of unequal peace 
He shall submit, then may he not possess 
Kingdom nor life. Denham. 
[inegnl, Fr.] Disproportioned ; ill matched. 
Fierce Belinda on the baron flies, 
mor fear’d the chief the unequal fight to try. Pope. 
Not regular; not uniform.—So strong, yet so unequal 
pulses beat. Dryden. —Not just. 
You are unequal to me, and however 
Your sentence may be righteous, you are not. B. Jonson. 
UNE'QUALABLE, adj. mot to be equalled ; not to be 
paralleled.—Christ’s love to God is filial and unequalable. 
Boyle. 
UNE'QUALLED, adj. Unparalleled; unrivalled in 
excellence.—By those unequalled and invaluable blessings, 
he manifested how much he hated sin, and how much he 
loved sinners. Boyle. 
UNE'QUALLYj adv. In different degrees; in dispro¬ 
portion one to the other. 
When we view some well proportion’d dome, 
mo single parts unequally surprize; 
All comes united to th’ admiring eyes. Pope. 
Not justly. 
Who right to all dost deale indifferently, 
Damning all wrong and tortious injurie, 
Which any of thy creatures do to other. 
Oppressing them with pow'er unequally. Spenser. 
UNE'QUALNESS, s. Inequality ; state of being equal. 
—The native plenty of our soil, the unequalness of our cli¬ 
mate. Temple. 
UNE'QUITABLE, adj. Not impartial; not just.—We 
force him to stand to those measures which we think too un¬ 
equitable to press upon a murderer. Dec. of Chr. Piety. 
UNEQUI'V’OCAL, adj. Not equivocal.—This conceit 
is erroneous, making putrefactive generations correspondent 
unto seminal productions, and conceiving unequivocal 
effects, and univocal conformity unto the efficient. Brown. 
UNERIG, a township of England, in Cumberland; 6 miles 
north-west-by-west of Cockermoulh. 
UNE'RRABLE, adj. Incapable of error; infallible. 
—The ignominy of your unerrable see is discovered. Shel¬ 
don. 
UNE'RRABLENESS, 
