450 
UNQ 
Smile, gentle heaven ! or strike, ungentle death ! 
For this world frowns, and Edward’s sun is clouded. 
Shakspeare. 
UNGE'NTLEMANLIKE, adj. Unlike a gentleman. 
UNGE'NTLEMANLY, adj. Illiberal; not becoming a 
gentleman.—The demeanour of those under Waller, was 
much more ungentle-manly and barbarous. Clarendon. 
UNGE'NTLENESS, s. Harshness; rudeness; severity. 
Reward not thy sheepe, when ye take off his cote. 
With twitches and patches as broad as groat: 
Let not such ungentleness happen to thine. Tusser. 
Unkindness; incivility. 
You have done me much ungentleness 
To shew the letter that I writ to you. Shakspeare. 
UNGE'NTLY, adv. Harshly; rudely.—Nor was it un- 
gent/y received by Lindamira. Arbuthiiot. 
UNGEOMETRICAL, adj. Not agreeableto the laws of 
geometry.—All the attempts before Sir Isaac Newton, to ex¬ 
plain the regular appearances of nature, were ungeometrical, 
and all of them inconsistent and unintelligible. Cheyne. 
UNGHA, a castle on the eastern coast of Tunis, situated 
in the heart of morasses; 76 miles south of Kairwan. 
UNGHVAR, a palatinate in the north-east of Hungary, 
adjacent to Poland, and bounded on the west and south by 
the palatinate of Semplin. It is watered by the rivers Ungh, 
Laborza, and Latorza, and in the north contains a portion of 
the Carpathian mountains, called Beszked. Its area is 1270 
square miles; its population about 80,000, partly of Hun¬ 
garian, and partly of Bohemian, Sclavonian, and Rusniak 
descent. The chief town is Unghvar. 
UNGI'LDED, adj. Not overlaid with gold. 
You, who each day can theatres behold 
Like Nero’s palace, shining all with gold. 
Our mean, ungilded stage will scorn. Dryden. 
To UNGI'RD, v. a. To loose any thing bound with a 
girdle. 
The blest parent 
Ungirt her spacious bosom, and discharg’d 
The pond’rous birth. Prior. 
UNGI'RT, adj. Loosely dressed. 
One tender foot was bare, the other shod; 
Her robe ungirt. Waller. 
UNGI'VING, adj. Not bringing gifts. 
In vain at shrines th’ ungiving suppliant stands: 
This ’tis to make a vow with empty hands. Dryden. 
UNGLA'ZED, adj. Wanting window-glasses. 
O now a low ruin’d white shed I discern 
Until’d and unglaz'd-, I believe ’tis a barn. Prior. 
Not covered with glass: a term of pottery.— •Unglaz'd 
earthen vessels easily transmit moisture. Kirwan. 
UNGLO'RIFIED, adj. Not honoured; not exalted 
with praise and adoration. 
To UNGLO'VE, v. a. To remove the glove from; to 
uncover.— Unglove your hand. Beaum. and FI. 
UNGLO'VED, adj. Having the hand naked.—When 
we were come near to his chair, he stood up, holding forth 
his hand ungloved, and in posture of blessing. Bacon. 
To UNGLU'E, v. a. To loose any thing cemented. 
She stretches, gapes, unglues her eyes. 
And asks if it be time to rise. Swift. 
To UNGO'D, v. a. To divest of divinity. 
Were we wak’ned by this tyranny, 
To ungod this child again, it could not be 
I should love her, who loves not me. Donne. 
Thus men ungodded may to places rise, 
And sects may be preferr’d without disguise. Dryden. 
UNGO'DLILY, adv. Impiously; wickedly.—’Tis but 
an ill essay of that godly fear, to use that very gospel so 
irreverently and ungodlily. Gov. of the Tongue. 
U N G 
UNGO'DLINESS, s. Impiety; wickedness; neglect of 
God.—How grossly do many of us contradict the plain pre¬ 
cepts of the gospel by our ungodliness and worldly lusts? 
Tillotson. 
UNGO'DLY, adj. Wicked; negligent of God and his 
laws. 
His just, avenging ire, 
Had driven out the ungodly from his sight, 
And the habitations of the just. Milton. 
Polluted by wickedness. 
Let not the hours of this ungodly day 
Wear out in peace. Shakspeare. 
UNGO'RED, adj. Unwounded; unhurt. 
I stand aloof, and will no reconcilement; 
’Till by some elder masters of known honour, 
I have a voice and precedent of peace, 
To keep my name ungor'd. Shakspeare. 
UNGO'RGED, adj. Not filled; not sated. 
The hell-hounds, as ungorged with flesh and blood. 
Pursue their prey. Dryden. 
UNGOT, adj. Not gained; not acquired: Not be¬ 
gotten. 
He is as free from touch or soil with her, 
As she from one ungot. Shakspeare. 
UNGO'VERNABLE, adj. Not to be ruled; not to be 
restrained.—They’ll judge every thing by models of their 
own; and thus are rendered unmanageable by any authority, 
and ungovernable by other laws but those of the sword. 
G/anville. —Licentious ; wild; uubridled.—So wild and 
ungovernable a poet, cannot be translated literally; his 
genius is too strong to bear a chain. Dryden. 
UNGO'VERNABLY, adj. So as not to be restrained. 
Heavens, how unlike their Belgick sires of old! 
Rough, poor, content, ungovernably bold. Goldsmith. 
UNGO'VERNED, adj. Being without government. 
It pleaseth God above. 
And all good men of this ungovern'd isle. Shakspeare. 
Not regulated ; unbridled; licentious. 
Seek for him. 
Lest his ungovern'd rage dissolve the life 
That wants the means to lead it. Shakspeare. 
UNGRA'CEFUL, adj. Wanting elegance; wanting 
beauty. 
Raphael answer’d;— 
Nor are thy lips ungraceful , sire of men. Milton. 
UNGRA'CEFULNESS, s. Inelegance ; awkwardness. 
—To attempt the putting another genius upon him, will be 
labour in vain; and what is so plaistered on, will have 
always hanging to it the ungracefulness of constraint. 
Locke. 
UNGRA'CIOUS, adj. Wicked ; odious; hateful. 
He, catching hold of her ungracious tongue, 
Thereon an iron lock did fasten firm and strong. Spenser. 
Offensive; unpleasing.—Show me no parts which are 
ungracious to the sight, as all pre-shortenings usually are. 
Dryden. —Unacceptable; not favoured.—They did not ex¬ 
cept against the persons of any, though several were most 
ungracious to them. Clarendon. 
UNGRAMMATICAL, adj. Not according to grammar. - 
—To exclude that ungrammatical misinterpretation on St. 
Paul. Barrow. 
UNGRA'NTED, adj. Not given; not yielded; not 
bestowed. 
This only from your goodness let me gain, 
And, this ungranted, all rewards are vain. Dryden. 
UNGRATEFUL, adj. Making no returns, or making 
ill returns for kindness.—No person is remarkably ungrate¬ 
ful, who was not also insufferably proud. South. —Making 
no returns for culture. 
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