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UNHA'RBOURED, adj. Affording no shelter. 
’Tis chastity: 
She that has that is clad in complete steel; 
And, like a quiver’d nymph, with arrows keen. 
May trace huge forests, and unharbour'd heaths, 
Infamous hills, and sandy perilous wilds. Milton. 
UNHA'RDENED, adj. Not hardened; not made im¬ 
pudent ; not made obdurate. 
Messengers 
Of strong prevailment in unharden'd youth. Shakspeare. 
UNHA'RDY, adj. Feeble; tender; timorous. 
The wisest, unexperienc'd will be ever 
Timorous, and loth, with novice modesty; 
Irresolute, unhardy , unadventurous. Milton. 
UNHA'RMED, adj. Unhurt; not injured. 
In strong proof of chastity well armed. 
From love’s weak, childish bow she lives unharm'd. 
Shakspeare. 
UNHA'RMFUL, adj. Innoxious; innocent. 
Themselves unharmful, let them live unharm’d ; 
Their jaws disabled, and their claws disarm’d. Dry den. 
UNHARMO'NIOUS, adj. Not symmetrical ; dispro¬ 
portionate. 
Those pure, immortal elements, that know 
No gross, no unharmonious mixture foul. 
Eject him, tainted now, and purge him off. Milton. 
Unmusical; ill-sounding.—His thoughts are improper to 
his subject, his expressions unworthy of his thoughts, or the 
turn of both is unharmonious. Dry den. 
To UNHA'RNESS, v. a. To loose from the traces. 
The sweating steers unharness'd from the yoke, 
Bring back the crooked plough. Dry den. 
To disarm; to divest of armour. 
UNHA'TCHED, adj. Not disclosed from the eggs.— 
Not brought to light. 
Some unhatch'd practice 
Hath puddled his clear spirit. Shakspeare. 
UNHA'UNTED, adj. Not resorted to. 
Some unhaunted place, 
Far from London, out of the common way. Mir. for Mag. 
UNHA'ZARDED, adj. Not adventured; not put in 
danger. 
Here I should still enjoy thee day and night 
Whole to myself, unhazarded abroad. 
Fearless at home. Milton. 
UNHEA'LTIIFUL, adj. Morbid; unwholesome.—The 
diseases which make years unhealthful, are spotted fevers; 
and the unhealthful season is the autumn. Graunt. 
UNHEA'LTHiLY, adv. In an unwholesome or unsound 
manner.—Proving but of bad nourishment in the concoction, 
it puffs up unhealthily a certain big face of pretended learn¬ 
ing. Milton. 
UNHEA'LTHINESS, s. State of being unhealthy.—In 
less than a week we were sensible of the unhealthiness of the 
climate. Hawkesworth. 
UNHEALTHY, adj. Sickly ; wanting health.—No 
body would have a child cramm’d at breakfast, who would 
not have him dull and unhealthy. Locke. 
UNHEA'RD, adj. Not perceived by the ear. 
For the noise of drums and timbrels loud. 
Their children’s cries unheard. Milton. 
Not vouchsafed an audience.—What pangs I feel, un¬ 
pitied and unheard l Dry den. —Unknown in celebration. 
—Nor was his name unheard, or unador’d. Milton. 
Unheard of. Obscure; not known by fame. 
Free from hopes or fears, in humble ease, 
Unheard of may I live and die in peace. Granville. 
Unheard of. Unprecedented. — There is a foundation 
u n h 
laid for the most unheard of confusion that ever was intro¬ 
duced into a nation. Swift. 
To UNHEA'RT, v. a. To discourage; to depress. 
To bite his lip, 
And hum at good Cominius, much unhearts me. 
Shakspeare. 
UNHEA'TED, adj. Not made hot.—Neither salts, nor 
the distilled spirits of them can penetrate the narrow pores of 
unheated glass. Boyle. 
UNHE'DGED, adj. Not surrounded by a hedge. 
Our needful knowledge, like our needful food. 
Unhedg'd lies open, in life’s common field. Young. 
UNHE'EDED, adj. Disregarded; not thought worthy 
of notice; escaping notice.—True experiments may, by 
reason of the uneasy mistake of some unheeded circumstance, 
be unsuccessfully tried. Boyle. 
UNHE'EDFUL, adj. Not cautious. 
Wilh an unheedful eye, 
An accidental view, as men see multitudes. Beaum. and FI. 
UNIIE'EDING, adj. Negligent; careless. 
I have not often seen him; if I did. 
He pass’d unmark’d by my unheeding eyes. Dryden. 
UNHE'EDY, adj. Precipitate; sudden. 
Learning his ship from those white rocks to save. 
Which all along the southern sea-coast lay. 
Threatening unheedy wreck, and rash decay. 
He nam’d Albion. Spenser. 
To UNHE'LE, v. a. To uncover; to expose to view. 
—Then suddenly both would themselves unhele. Spenser. 
UNHE'LPED, adj. Unassisted; having no auxiliary ; 
unsupported. 
Unhelp'd I am, who pity’d the distress’d. 
And none oppressing, am by all oppress’d. Dryden. 
UNIIE'LPFUL, adj. Giving no assistance. 
I bewail good Glo’ster’s case 
With sad, unhelpful tears. Shakspeare. 
The disturbance of her unhelpful and unfit society. Mil- 
ton. 
UNHE'WN, part. adj. Not hewn.—In occasions of 
merriment, this rough-cast, unhewn poetry, was instead of 
stage plays. Dryden . 
UNHIDEBOUND, adj. Lax of maw; capacious. 
Though plenteous, all too little seems 
To stuff this maw, this vast unhidebound corpse. Milton 
UNHINDERED, adj. Not opposed; meeting with no 
hindrance; exerting itself freely.—Virtue, ’tis true, in its 
proper seat, and with all its full effects and consequences un¬ 
hindered, must be confessed to be the chief good, as being 
truly the enjoyment, as well as the imitation of God. Clarke. 
To UNHI'NGE, v. a. To throw from the hinges.—To 
displace by violence. 
For want of cement, ribs of rock disjoin’d 
Without an earthquake, from their base would start. 
And hills unhing'd, from their deep roots depart. 
Blackmore. 
To disorder; to confuse. 
Rather than not accomplish my revenge. 
Just or unjust, I would the world unhinge. Waller. 
To UNHO'ARD, v. a. To steal from the hoard. 
Or as a thief, bent to unhoard the cash 
Of some rich burgher, whose substantial doors, 
Cross-barr’d and bolted fast, fear no assault. 
In at the window climbs, or o’er the tiles. Milton. 
UNHO'LINESS, s. Impiety; profaneness; wickedness. 
—Too foul and manifest was the unholiness of obtruding 
upon men remission of sins for money. Ralegh. 
UNHO'LY, adj. [unhalij, Saxon.] Profane; not hal¬ 
lowed.—Doth it follow that all things now in the church are 
unholy, which the Lord hath not himself precisely insti¬ 
tuted ? Hooker. —Impious; wicked. 
Far 
