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UNFATI'GUED, adj. Unwearied; untired. 
Over dank, and dry. 
They journey toilsome, unfatigu'd with length 
Of march. Philips. 
UNFAVOURABLE, adj. Not kind. These communi¬ 
cations have been unfavourable to literature. Warton .— 
Disapproving.—Talivera at last made an unfavourable 
report to Ferdinand and Isabella. Robertson. 
UNFAVOURABLY, adv. Unkindly; unpropitiously.. 
So as not to countenance, or support.—Bacon speaks not 
unfavourably of this. Glanville. 
UNFE’ARED, adj. Not affrighted; intrepid; not 
terrified. Not in use. 
Just men 
Though Heaven should speak with all his wrath at once. 
That with his breath the hinges of the world 
Did crack, we should stand upright and unfear'd. 
B. Jons on. 
Not dreaded ; not regarded with terrour. 
He, 
A most unbounded tyrant, whose successes 
Make heaven unfear'd, and viilany assur’d 
Beyond its power! Beaum. and FI. 
UNFE'ASIBLE, adj. Impracticable.—I was brought to 
a despondency of spirit, and a despair of attaining to my 
search, as being fruitless and unfeasible. Bp. Richardson. 
UNFE'ATHERED, adj. Implumous; naked of feathers. 
The mother nightingale laments alone; 
Whose nest some prying churl had found, and thence 
By stealth convey’d th’ unfeather'd innocence. Dryden. 
UNFE'ATURED, adj. Deformed; wanting regularity 
nf features. 
Visage rough. 
Deformed, unfeatur'd, and a skin of buff. Dryden. 
UNFE'D, adj. Not supplied with food. 
Each bone might through his body well be read, 
And every sinew seen through his long fast; 
For nought he car’d, his carcass long unfed. Spenser. 
UNFE'ED, adj. Unpaid.—It is like the breath of an 
unfeed lawyer; you gave me nothing for’t. Shakspeare. 
UNFE'ELING, adj. Insensible; void of mental sensi¬ 
bility. 
Unlucky Welsted! thy unfeeling master. 
The more thou ticklest, gripes his fist the faster. Pope. 
UNFE'ELINGLY, adv. Without sensibility. —The 
German turned his head back, looked down upon the dwarf 
as Goliath did upon David, and unfeelingly resumed his 
posture. Sterne. 
UNFE'ELINGNESS, 5 . Want of feeling—With what 
flatness and unfeelingness has he spoken of statuary and 
painting! Warton. 
UNFEIGNED, adj. Not counterfeited; not hypo¬ 
critical ; real; sincere. 
Thousand decencies that daily flow 
From all her words and actions, mix’d with love. 
And sweet compliance, which declare unfeigned 
Union of mind. " Milton. 
UNFE'IGNEDLY, ado. Really ; sincerely ; without 
hypocrisy. 
Prince dauphin, can you love this lady ?- 
-1 love her most unfeignedly. Shakspeare. 
UNFE'LLOWED, adj. Not matched. Unused. 
UNFE'LT, adj. Not felt; not perceived. 
Her looks infus’d 
Sweetness into my heart, unfelt before. Milton . 
To UNFE'NCE, v. a. To take away a fence.—There is 
never a limb, never a vein or artery of the body, but it is 
the scene and receptacle of pain, whensoever it shall please 
God to unfence it, and let in some sharp disease or dis¬ 
temper upon it. South. 
UNFE'NCED, adj. Naked of fortification. 
I’d play incessantly upon these jades; 
Even till unfenced desolation 
Leave them as naked as the vulgar air. Shakspeare. 
Not surrounded by any inclosure. 
UNFERME'NTED, adj. Not fermented,—All such ve¬ 
getables must be unfermented; for fermentation changes 
their nature. Arbuihnot. 
UNFE'RTILE, adj. Not fruitful; not prolific.—Peace 
is not such a dry tree, such a sapless, unfertile thing, but 
that it might fructify and increase. Dec, of Chr. Piety. 
I'o UNFETTER, v. a. To unchain; to free from shackles. 
Unfetter me with speed, 
I see you troubled that I bleed. Dryden. 
UNFI'GURED, adj. Representing no animal form.—In 
unfgur'd paintings, the noblest is the imitation of marbles, 
and of architecture, as arches, friezes. Wotton. 
UNFI'LLED, adj. Not filled; not supplied.—Come 
not to table, but when thy need invites thee; and if thou 
beest in health, leave something of thy appetite unfilled. 
Bp. Taylor. 
UNFI'LIAL, adj. Unsuitable to a son. 
You offer him a wrong 
Something unfilial. Shakspeare. 
UNFI'NISHED, adj. Incomplete.—I did dedicate to 
you a very unfinished piece. Dryden. 
UNFI'RM, adj. Weak; feeble. 
Our fancies are more giddy and unfirm 
Than women’s are. Shakspeare. 
Not stable. 
Take the time, while stagg’ring yet they stand, 
With feet unfirm, and prepossess the strand. Dryden. 
UNFIT, adj. Improper; unsuitable.—They easily per¬ 
ceive how unfit that were for the present, which was for the 
first age convenient enough. Hooker. —Unqualified. 
Old as I am, for ladies’ love unfit, 
The power of beauty I remember yet. Dryden. 
A genius that can hardly take in the connection of three 
propositions, is utterly unfit for speculative studies. Watts. 
To UNFIT, v. a. To disqualify.—Those excellencies, 
as they disqualified him for dominion, so they unfitted him 
for a satisfaction or acquiescence in his vassals. Gov. of the 
Tongue. 
UNFITNESS, s. Want of qualifications; want of pro¬ 
priety. 
UNFITTING, adj. Not proper.—Although monosyl¬ 
lables, so rife in our tongue, are unfitting for verses, yet are 
they the most fit for expressing briefly the first conceits of 
the mind. Camden. 
UNFITLY, adv. Not properly; not suitably.—Others, 
reading to the church those books which the apostles wrote, 
are neither untruly nor unfitly said to preach. Hooker. 
To UNFI'X, v. a. To loosen ; to make less fast. 
Plucking to unfix an enemy. 
He doth unfasten so and shake a friend. Shakspeare. 
To make fluid. 
Stiff with eternal ice, and hid in snow, 
The mountain stands, nor can the rising sun 
Unfix her frosts and teach them how to run. Dryden. 
UNFI'XED, adj. Wandering; erratic; inconstant; va¬ 
grant. 
So vast the noise, as if not fleets did join ; 
But lands unfix'd, and floating nations strove. Dryden. 
Not determined. 
Irresolute on which she should rely: 
At last unfix'd in all, is only fix’d to die. Dryden. 
UNFPXEDNESS, s. The state of being unfixed ; power 
of roving at large.—-To abide fixed, as it were, in their own 
unfixedness, and to be steady in their restless motions, doth 
it 
