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U M F 
lo let in light unfoul'd and unsophisticated by any tinc¬ 
ture. More. 
UNFOU'ND, adj. Not found; not met with. 
Somewhat in her excelling all her kind. 
Excited a desire till then unknown; 
Somewhat unfound, or found in her alone. Dry den. 
UNFOU'NDED, adj. Void of foundation. 
From them I go 
This uncouth errand sole, and one for all 
Myself expose, with lonely steps to tread 
The unfounded deep. Milton. 
Without authority or foundation: as, an unfounded 
report. 
UNFRA'M^BLE, adj. Not to be moulded. Not used. 
—The cause of their disposition so unframable unto so¬ 
cieties, wherein they live, is for that they discern not aright 
what force these laws ought to have. Hooker. 
To UNFRA'ME, v. a. To destroy the frame or con¬ 
struction of.—Sin has unframed the fabric of the whole 
man. South. 
UNFRA'MEB, adj. Not framed ; not fashioned. 
A lifeless lump, unfashion’d and unfram'd , 
Of jarring seeds, and justly chaos nam’d Dryden. 
UNFRE'QUENT, adj. Uncommon; not happening 
often.—Part thereof is visible unto any situation ; but being- 
only discoverable in the night, and when the air is clear, it 
becomes unfrequent. Brown. 
To UNFREQUE'NT, v. a. To leave ; to cease to 
frequent. A bad word. 
Glad to shun his hostile gripe, 
They quit their thefts, and unfrequent the fields. Philips. 
UNFREQUE'NTED, adj. Rarely visited ; rarely en¬ 
tered—With what caution does the hen provide herself a 
nest in places unfrequented, and free from noise. Addison. 
UNFRE'QUENTLY, adv. Not commonly.—They, 
like Judas, desire death, and not unfrequently pursue it. 
Brown. 
UNFRI'ABLE, adj. Not easily to be crumbled.—The 
smooth surface, the elastic and unfriable nature of cartilage, 
render it of all substances the most proper for the place and 
purpose. Pa/ey. 
UNFRIE'NDED, adj. Wanting friends; uncounte¬ 
nanced ; unsupported. 
These parts to a stranger, 
Unguided and unfriended, often prove 
Rough and inhospitable. Shalcspeare. 
UNFRIE'NDLINESS, s. Want of kindness; want of 
favour.—You might be apt to look upon such disappoint¬ 
ments as the effects of an unfriendliness in nature or fortune 
to your particular attempts. Boyle. 
UNFRIE'NDLY, adj. Not benevolent; not kind.— 
What signifies an unfriendly parent or brother ? ’Tis 
friendship only that is the cement which effectively combines 
mankind. Gov. of the Tongue. 
To UNFRO'CK, v. a. To divest.—Another of her 
bishops she [queen Elizabeth] threatened with an oath to 
unfrock; that was her majesty’s own word. Hurd. — 
Unfrocking of a priest. Milton. 
UNFRO'ZEN, adj. Not congealed to ice.—Though 
the more aqueous parts will, by the loss of their motion, be 
turned into ice, yet the more subtile parts remain unfrozen. 
Boyle. 
UNFRUITFUL, adj. Not prolific. 
Ah! hopeless, lasting flames! like those that burn 
To light the dead, and warm th’ unfruitful urn. Pope. 
Not fructiferous. 
The naked rocks are not unfruitful there ; 
Their barren tops with luscious food abound. Waller. 
Not fertile.—Lay down some general rules for the know¬ 
ing of fruitful and unfruitful soils. Mortmer. —Not 
producing good effects. 
Vol. XXIV. No. 1648. 
U N G 
UNFRUI'TFELNESS, s. Barrenness; infecundity.—. 
Had God indulged man the liberty of using what creatures 
he pleased for his food, he might easily have made himself 
an amends for the unfruitfulness of the earth, by the many 
good things which nature had provided for him. Stack- 
house. 
UNFULFILLED, adj. Not fulfilled. 
Fierce desire. 
Still unfulfilled with pain of longing, pines. Milton. 
UNFU'MED, adj. Not exhaling smoke as in fumiga¬ 
tions ; not burnt. 
The ground 
With rose and odours from the shrub unfum'd. Milton. 
To UNFU'RL, v. a. To expand ; to unfold; to open. 
—The next motion is that of unfurling the fan, in which 
are several little flirts and vibrations. Addison. 
To UNFU'RNISH, v. a. To deprive; to strip; to di¬ 
vest. 
Thy speeches 
Will bring me to consider that which may 
Unfurnish me of reason. Shakspeare. 
To leave naked. 
The Scot on his unfurnish'd kingdom 
Came pouring like a tide into a breach. Shakspeare. 
UNFURNISHED, adj. Not accommodated with uten¬ 
sils, or decorated with ornaments.—It derogates not more 
from the goodness of God, that he has given us minds un¬ 
furnish'd with those ideas of himself, than that he hath sent 
us into the world with bodies unclothed. Locke. 
UNGA'IN, or Unga'inly, adj. [unjaegne, Sax.] 
Awkward; uncouth. Ungain is the colloquial word.— 
Flora was so ungainly in her behaviour, and such a laugh¬ 
ing hoyden. Tat/er. —Vain. [The Saxon word is used for 
irritus as well as ineptusi] Misusing their knowledge to 
ungainly ends, as either ambition, superstition, or for satis¬ 
fying their curiosity. Hammond. 
UNGA'INFUL, adj. Unprofitable.—He dissuaded me 
from so ungainful a charge. Bp. Hall. 
UNGA'LLED, adj. Unhurt; unwounded. 
Let the stricken deer go weep, 
The hart ungalled play; 
For some must watch, while some must sleep ; 
So runs the world away. Shakspeare. 
UNGA'RRISONED, adj. Without a garrison.—On 
the north side it has an old Turkish ungarrisoned castle. 
Maundrcll. 
UNGA'RTERED, adj. Being without garters.—You 
chid at Sir Protheus, for going ungartered. Shakspeare. 
UNGA'THERED, adj. Not cropped; not picked. 
We wonder’d why she kept her fruit so long: 
For whom so late the uvgather’d apples hung. Dryden. 
To UNGE'AR, v. a. [unjipian, Sax.] To unharness. 
Unused. 
UNGE'NERATED, adj. Unbegotten; having no 
beginning.—Millions of souls must have been ungenerated , 
and have had no being. Ralegh. 
UNGE'NERATIVE, adj. "Begetting nothing.—He is a 
motion ungenerative, that’s infallible. Shakspeare. 
UNGE'NEROUS, adj. Not noble; not ingenuous; not 
liberal.—To look into letters already opened or dropped, is 
held an ungenerous act. Pope. —Ignominious. 
The victor never will impose on Cato 
Ungenerous terms. His enemies confess 
The virtues of humanity are Caesar’s. Addison. 
UNGE'NIAL, adj. Not kind or favourable to nature.— 
The northern shires have a more cloudy, ungenial air, than 
any part of Ireland. Swift. 
UNGENTEE'L, adj. Not genteel.—The laws of mar¬ 
riage run in a harsher style towards your sex. Obey is an 
uugenteel word! Ld Halifax. 
UNGE'NTLE, adj. Harsh; rude; rugged. 
4 U Smile, 
