446 U N E 
UNEXPE'RIENCED, adj. Not versed; not acquainted 
by trial or practice. 
UN EXPERT, adj. [inexpertus, Lat.] Wanting skill 
or knowledge, 
Receive the partner of my inmost soul: 
Him you will find in letters, and in laws 
Not unexpert. Prior. 
UNEXPLO'RED, adj. Not searched out. 
Oh ! say what stranger cause, yet unexplor'd. 
Could make a gentle belle reject a lord ? Pope. 
Not tried; not known. 
Under thy friendly conduct will I fiy, 
To regions unexplor’d. Drpden. 
UNEXPO'SED, adj. Not laid open to censure.—They 
will endeavour to diminish the honour of the best treatise, 
rather than suffer the little mistakes of the author to pass 
unexposed. Watts. 
UNEXPRE'SSIBLE, adj. Ineffable; not to be uttered. 
—What unexpressible comfort does overflow the pious soul, 
from a conscience of its own innocency. Til/otson. 
UNEXPRE'SSIVE, adj. Not having the power of 
uttering or expressing. This is the natural signification, 
inexpressible; unutterable; ineffable; not to be expressed. 
Improper, and out of use. 
Run, run, Orlando, carve on every free 
The fair, the chaste, and unexpressive she. Shak'speare. 
UNEXTE'NDED, adj. Occupying no assignable space; 
having no dimensions.—How inconceivable is it, that a 
spiritual, i. e. an unextended substance, should represent to 
the mind an extended one, as a triangle ? Locke. 
UNEXTI'NGUISHABLE, adj. Unquenchable; not to 
be put out. 
Pain of unextinguishable fire 
Must exercise us, without hope of end. Milton. 
UNEXTI'NGUISHED, adj. [inextinctus, Lat.] Not 
quenched; not put out. 
Ev’n o’er your cold, your ever-sacred urn, 
His constant flame shall unextinguish'd burn. Lyttleton. 
Notextinguishable.—An ardent thirst of honour; a soul 
unsatisfied with all it has done, and an unextinguish'd 
desire of doing more. Drpden. 
UNFA'DED, adj. Not withered. 
A lovely flow’r, 
Unfaded yet, but yet unfed below, 
No more to mother earth, or the green stem shall owe. 
Drpden. 
UNFA'DING, adj. Not liable to wither. 
For her th’ unfading rose of Eden blooms, 
And wings of seraphs shed divine perfumes. Pope. 
UNFA'DINGNESS, s. Quality of being unfading.—We 
consider the unfadingness of their [the Phenicians’] pur¬ 
ple. Polwhele. 
UNFA'ILABLE, adj. That cannot fail.— We be¬ 
lieve this unfailable word of truth. Bp. Hall. 
UNFA'ILABLENESS, s. State which cannot fail.—He 
takes all believers into the partnership of this comfortable 
unfailab/cness. Bp. Hall. 
UNFA'ILING, adj. Certain; not missing.—Nothing 
the united voice of all history proclaims so loud, as the 
certain, unfailing curse, that has pursued and overtook 
sacrilege. South. 
UNFA'ILINGNESS, s. The state of being unfailing. 
UNFA'INTING, adj. Not sinking; not drooping.— 
And O, that I could retain the effects that it wrought with 
an unfainting perseverance! Sandps. 
UNFAIR, adj. [unpaegep. Sax., deformis. ] Disin¬ 
genuous; subdolous; not honest.—You come, like an un¬ 
fair merchant, to charge me with being in your debt. 
Swift. 
UNFAIRLY, adv. Not in a just manner—They act 
unfairly, that they may be sure to be sharp enough. Parnel. 
UNFAIRNESS, s. Unfair dealing; disingenuous con- 
U N F 
duct.—We shall make Some remarks upon his ignorance 
and unfairness in several incidents that he has slid in by 
the by. Bentley. 
UNFAITHFUL, adj. Perfidious; treacherous. 
My feet, through wine, unfaithful to their weight. 
Betray’d me tumbling from a tow’ry height, Pope. 
Impious; infidel. 
Thence shall come 
To judge the unfaithful dead; but to reward 
His faithful, and receive them into bliss. Milton. 
UNFAITHFULLY, adv. Treacherously; perfidiously. 
—There is danger of being unfaithfullp counselled; and 
more for the good of them that counsel, than for him that 
is counselled. Bacon. 
UNFAITHFULNESS, s. Treachery; perfidiousness.— 
As the obscurity of what some writers deliver, makes it very 
difficult to be understood; so the unfaithfulness of too 
many others, makes it unfit to be relied on. Boyle. 
UNFA'LLOWED, adj. Not fallowed. 
Th’ unfallow'd glebe 
Yearly o’ercomes the granaries with stores 
Of golden wheat. Philips. 
UNFA'MILIAR, adj. Unaccustomed; such as is not 
common.—Chaucer’s uncouth, or rather unfamiliar, lan¬ 
guage, deters many readers. Warton . . 
UNFA'SHIONABLE, adj. Not modish; not according 
to the reigning custom.—A man writes good sense, but he 
has not a happy manner of expression. Perhaps he uses 
obsolete and unfashionable language. Watts. 
UNFA'SHIONABLENESS, s. Deviation from the mode. 
—Natural unfashionableness is much better than apish, 
affected postures. Locke. 
UNFA'SHIONABLY, adv. Not according to the fashion. 
Unartfully. 
Deform’d, unfinish’d, sent before my time 
Into this breathing world, scarce half made up ; 
And that so lamely and unfashionablp. 
That dogs bark at me. Shakspeare. 
UNFA'SHIONED, adj. Not modified by art. 
Mark but how terribly his eyes appear; 
And yet there is something roughly noble there; 
Which, in unfashion'd nature, looks divine. 
And, like a gem, does in the quarry shine. Drpden. 
Having no regular form. 
A lifeless lump, unfashion'd and unfram’d, 
Of jarring seeds, and justly chaos nam’d. Drpden. 
UNFA'ST, adj. [unpaepc, Sax., infurmus, caducus. ] Not 
safe; not secure. 
To UNFA'STEN, v. a. To loose; to unfix.—He had 
no sooner unfastened his hold, but that a wave forcibly 
spoiled his weaker hand of hold. Sidney. 
UNFA'THERED, adj. Fatherless; having no father. 
They do observe 
Unfather'd heirs, and loathly births of nature. Shakspeare. 
UNFATHOMABLE, adj. Not to be sounded by a line. 
—In the midst of the plain a beautiful lake, which the in¬ 
habitants thereabouts pretend is unfathomable. Addison. 
—That of which the end or extent cannot be found.—A 
thousand parts of our bodies may be diversified in all the 
dimensions of solid bodies; which overwhelms the fancy in 
a new abyss of unfathomable number. Bentley. 
UNFA'THOMABLENESS, s. State or quality of being 
unfathomable.-—A sufficient argument of the unfathomable¬ 
ness of this great dispensation of mercy, which can still 
find further employment for the study and curiosity even of 
angels. Not'ris. 
UNFA'THOMABLY, adv. So as not to be sounded.— 
Cover’d pits, unfathomably deep. Thomson. 
UNFA'THOMED, adj. Not to be sounded. 
The Titan race 
He sing’d with lightning, rowl within the unfathom'd space. 
Dry den. 
UNFATI'GUED, 
