U N E U N E 445 
UNE'RRABLENESS, j. Incapacity of error.—The 
many innovations of that church witness the danger of pre¬ 
suming upon the unerrableness of a guide. Dec. of Chr. 
Piety . 
UNERRING, adj. [inerrans, Latin.]—Committing 
no mistake. 
His javelin threw. 
Hissing in air the unerring weapon flew. Drydcn # 
Incapable of failure; certain.—Of lovers of truth, for 
truth’s sake; there is this one unerring mark, the not en¬ 
tertaining any proposition, with greater assurance than the 
proofs it is built upon will warrant. Locke. 
UNE'RRINGLY, adv. Without mistake.-—What those 
figures are, which should be mechanically adapted, to fall 
so unerringly into regular compositions, is beyond our facul¬ 
ties to conceive. Glanville. 
UNESCHE'WABLE, adj. Inevitable; unavoidable; not 
to be escaped. Not in use. —He gave the mayor sufficient 
warning to shift for safety, if an uneschewable destiny had 
not haltered him. Carew. 
UNESPI'ED, adj. Not seen; undiscovered; undes- 
cried. 
Nearer to view his prey, and unespy'd 
To mark what of their state he more might learn. Milton. 
UNESSA'YED, adj. Unattempted. 
Then sedulously think 
To meliorate thy stock, no way or rule 
Be unessay'd. Philips. 
UNESSE'NTIAL, adj. Not being of the last impor¬ 
tance; not constituting essence.—Tillotson was moved rather 
with pity, than indignation, towards the persons of those 
who differed from him in the unessential parts of Christianity. 
Addison. —Void of real being. 
The void profound 
Of unessential night receives him next. - Milton. 
To UNESTA'BLISII, v. a. To deprive of establish¬ 
ment.—The parliament demanded of the king to unestablish 
that prelatical government. Milton. 
UNESTA'BLISHED, adj. Not established.—From plain 
principles, doubt may be fairly solved, and not clapped up 
from petitionary foundations unestablished. Brown. 
UNEVEN, adj. Not even; not level. 
These high wild hills, and rough, uneven ways, 
Draw out our miles, and make them wearisome. 
Shakspeare. 
Not suiting each other: not equal.—The Hebrew verse 
consists of uneven feet. Peacham. 
UNEVENNESS, s. Surface not level; inequality of 
surface.—That motion which can continue long in one and 
the same part of the body, can be propagated a long way 
from one part to another, supposing the body homogeneal; 
so that the motion may not be reflected, refracted, inter¬ 
rupted, or disordered by any unevenness of the body. 
Newton. —Turbulence; changeable state. Unused. —Not 
smoothness.—Notwithstanding any such unevenness or in¬ 
distinctness in the style of those places, concerning the origin 
and form of the earth. Burnet. 
■ UNE'VITABLE, adj. [inevitabilis, Lat.; inevitable, 
Fr.] Inevitable; not to be escaped.—So jealous is she of 
my love to her daughter, that I never yet begin to open my 
mouth to the unevitable Philoclea, but that her unwished 
presence gave my tale a conclusion, before it had a be¬ 
ginning. Sidney. 
UNEXACTED, adj. Not exacted; not taken by force. 
All was common, and the fruitful earth 
Was free, to give her unexacted birth. Drydcn. 
UNEXA'MINABLE, adj. Not to be enquired into.— 
Used by Milton. 
UNEXA'MINED, adj. Not enquired; not tried; not 
discussed. They utter ail they think, with a violence and 
indisposition, unexamin'd, without relation to person, place, 
or fitness. B. Jonson. 
Vox,. XXIV. No. 1648. 
UNEXAMPLED, adj. Not known by any precedent 
or example. 
O unexampled love! 
Love no where to be found less than divine. Milton. 
UNEXCE'PTIONABLE, adj. Not liable to any ob¬ 
jection.—Personal prejudices should not hinder us from pur¬ 
suing, with joint hands and hearts, the unexceptionable 
design of this pious institution. Atterbury. 
UNEXCE'PTIONABLENESS, 5. State or quality of 
being unexceptionable.—If it had been accompanied with 
other parts of his exposition of these epistles that had the like 
unexceptionableness, it would never have been found fault 
with. More. 
UNEXCE'PTIONABLY, adv. So as to be not liable to 
objection. The resurrection of Jesus was most fully and 
most unexceptionubly proved. West. 
UNEXCl'SED, adj. Not subject to the payment of 
excise.—And beggars taste thee unexcis'd by kings. Brown. 
UNEXCO'GITABLE, adj. Not to be found out. 
UNEXCU'SABLE, adj. Having no excuse; admitting 
of no excuse.—If we examine those prayers that are put up 
to the saints, their invocation is still the more unexcusable. 
More. 
UNEXCU'SEABLENESS, s. State or quality of being 
unexcuseable.—We will rip up to you the unexcusableness 
of the heathen ignorance in general. Hammond. 
UNE'XECUTED, adj. Not performed; not done.— 
Leave unexecuted your own renowned knowledge. Shak¬ 
speare. 
UNEXE'MPLIFIED, adj. Not made known by instance 
or example.—This being a new, unexemplify'd kind of 
policy, must pass for the wisdom of this particular age, 
scorning the examples of all former ages. South. 
UNEXE'MPT, adj. Not free by peculiar privilege. 
You invert the covenants of her trust, 
And harshly deal like an ill borrower, 
With that which you receiv’d on other terms. 
Scorning the unexempt condition 
By which all mortal frailty must subsist. Milton. 
UNEXE'RCISED, adj. Not practised ; not experienced. 
—Abstract ideas are not so obvious to the yet unexercised 
mind, as particular ones. Locke. 
UNEX'ERTED, adj. Not called into action; not pul 
forth.—Attend with patience the uncertainty of things, and 
what lieth yet unexerted in the chaos of futurity. Brown. 
UNEXHAUSTED, adj. [inexhaustus, Lat.] Not spent; 
not drained to the bottom. 
What avail her unexhausted stores ? 
While proud oppression in her vallies reigns. Addison. 
UNEXI'STENT, adj. Not in existence. 
UNEXPA'NDED, adj. Not spread out. 
Every foetus bears a secret hoard; 
With sleeping, unexpanded issue stor’d. Blackmore. 
UNEXPECTA'TION, s. Want of previous considera¬ 
tion ; want of foresight.—As every other evil, so this espe¬ 
cially, is aggravated by our unexpectation. Bp. Hall. 
UNEXPECTED, adj. Not thought on; sudden; not 
provided against. 
O unexpected stroke ! worse than death! 
Must I thus leave thee, paradise ? Milton. 
UNEXPECTEDLY, adv. Suddenly; at a time un¬ 
thought of. 
Oft he seems to hide his face. 
But unexpectedly returns. Milton. 
UNEXPECTEDNESS, s. Suddenness; untheught of 
time or manner.—He describes the unexpectedness of his 
appearance. Watts, 
UNEXPE'DIENT, adj. Inconvenient; not fit. 
UNEXPEN'SIVE, adj. Not costly, not with great ex - 
pence,—My life hath not been unexpensive in learning, and 
voyaging about. Milton. 
" “ 4 T UNEXPERIENCED, 
