U N H 
Far other dreams my erring soul employ; 
Far other raptures of unholy joy. Pope. 
UNHO'NEST, adj. [inhoneste, Fr. ; inhoncstus, Lat.] 
Dishonourable ; dishonest. Obsolete. —Honest things be 
known from unhonest things. Ascham. 
UNHO'NOURED, adj. Not regarded with veneration’ 
not celebrated. 
Unhonour'd though I am, at least, said she. 
Not unreveng’d that impious act shall be. 
Not treated with respect. 
Griev’d that a visitant so long shou’d wait, 
Unmark’d, unhonour'd, at a monarch’s gate. 
7'o UNHO'OP, v. a. To divest of hoops. 
Merchants do unhoope 
Voluminous barrels. 
UNHOTED, or Unho'ped for, adj. Not expected ; 
greater than hope had promised. 
With unhop'd success 
The embassadors return with promis’d peace. Dryden. 
UNIIO'PEFUL, adj. Such as leaves no room to hope.— 
Benedict is not the unkopefullest husband that I know: 
thus far I can praise him; he is of approved valour. 
Shakspcare. 
To UNHO'RSE, v. a. To beat from an horse; to throw 
from the saddle.'—He would unhorse the lustiest challenger. 
Sha/cspeare. 
UNHO'SPITABLE, adj. [inhospitalis, Lat.] Afford¬ 
ing no kindness or entertainment to strangers; cruel; bar¬ 
barous. 
The cruel nation, covetous of prey, 
Stain’d with my blood the unhospitable coast. Dryden. 
UNHOST, or Aunhost, a small town of Bohemia, with 
1000 inhabitants; 9 miles west of Prague. 
UNHO'STILE, adj. Not belonging to an enemy. 
The high prancing steeds 
Spurn their dismounted riders; they expire 
Indignant, by unhostile wounds destroy’d. Philips. 
To UNHOU'SE, v. a. To drive from the habitation. 
Seek true religion : O where ? Mirreus! 
Thinking her unhous'd here, and fled from us. 
Seek her at Rome. Donne. 
UNHOU'SED, adj. Homeless; wanting a house. 
Call the creatures. 
Whose naked natures live in all the spight 
Of wreakful heaven ; whose bare, unhoused trunks, 
To the conflicting elements expos’d, 
Answer meer nature. Sha/cspeare. 
Hear this. 
You unhous'd, lawless, rambling libertines. Southern. 
UNHOU'SELLED, adj. Having not the sacrament. See 
To Housel. 
Thus was I sleeping, by a brother’s hand. 
Of life, of crown, of queen at once dispatch’d; 
Cut off even in the blossoms of my sin, 
Unhousel'd, disappointed, unanel’d. Sha/cspeare. 
UNHU'MAN, adj. Barbarous; inhuman. Not now in 
use. — Unhuman and remorseless cruelty, shown in the spoil 
and waste they had made upon all nations round about them 
for the propagation of their empire, which they were still 
enlarging as their desires, and their desires as hell. South. 
UNHU'MBLED, adj. Not humbled; not touched with 
shame or confusion. 
Should I of these the liberty regard. 
Who, freed as to their ancient patrimony, 
Unhumbled, unrepented, unreformed, 
Headlong would follow. Milton. 
UNHU'RT, adj. Free from harm.—Of fifteen hundred, 
eight hundred were slain in the field; and of the remaining 
seven hundred, two men only came off unhurt. Bacon. 
Yol. XXIV. No. 1648. 
UNI 453 
UNHU'RTFUL, adj. Innoxious; harmless; doing no 
harm. 
You hope the duke will return no more, or 
You imagine me too unhurtful an opposite. Sha/cspeare. 
UNHU'RTFULLY, adv. Without harm; innoxiously. 
—We laugh at others as innocently and as unhurtfully, as 
at ourselves. Pope to Swift. 
UNHU'SBANDED, adj. Deprived of support; ne¬ 
glected. 
With hanging heads I have beheld 
A widow vine stand in a naked field, 
Unhusbanded, neglected, all forlorn. Browne. 
UNHU'SKED, adj. Having quitted the husk. 
Could no unhusked acorne leave the tree. 
But there was challenge made whose it might be. Bp. Hall. 
U'NICORN, s. [ unicornis, units and cornu, Lat.] A 
beast, whether real or fabulous, that has only one horn.— 
Wert thou the unicorn, pride and wrath would confound 
thee. Sha/cspeare. —Some unicorns we will allow even 
among insects, as those nasicornous beetles described by 
Muffetus. Brown.—A bird. Of the unicorn bird, the 
principal marks are these ; headed and footed like the dung¬ 
hill cock, tailed like a goose, horned on his forehead, with 
some likeness, as the unicorn is pictured; spurr’d on his 
wings, bigger than a swan. Grew. 
UNICORN, a post township of the United States in Lan¬ 
caster county, Pennsylvania; 59 miles west of Philadelphia. 
UNIDE'AL, adj. Not ideal; real.—Some will be dis¬ 
covered at a window by the road side, rejoicing when a new 
cloud of dust gathers toward them, as at the approach of a 
momentary supply of conversation, and a short relief from 
the tediousness of unideal vacancy. Johnson. 
UNIEH, a seaport of Asia Minor, on the coast of the 
Black sea, the ancient JEnoe. It is situated on a bay, with 
a range of finely wooded mountains behind. The houses 
are built of wood, those next the sea being erected on stone 
piers or pillars ; 40 miles east of Samsoon. 
UNJE'ALOUS, adj. Not suspiciously fearful; having 
no unreasonable mistrust.—The indulgence, under which 
they enjoy present ease, is founded on the gentle and un- 
jea/ous temper of the king, which may be shaken and 
changed by several accidents that may fall out. Clarendon. 
U'NIFORM, adj. Keeping its tenour; similar to itself. 
—Though when confusedly mingled, as in this stratum, it 
may put on a face never so uniform and alike, yet it is in 
reality very different". Woodward. —Conforming to one 
rule; acting in the same manner; agreeing with each 
other.—The only doubt is about the manner of their unity, 
how far churches are bound to be uniform in their cere¬ 
monies, and what way they ought to take for that purpose. 
Hooker. 
U'NIFORM, s. The regimental dress of a soldier. 
UNIFO'RMITY, s. [ uniformity, Fr.] Resemblance to 
itself; even tenour.—There is no uniformity in the design 
of Spenser; he aims at the accomplishment of no one 
action. Dryden. —Conformity to one pattern; resem¬ 
blance of one to another. The great council of Nice or¬ 
dained that there should be a constant uniformity in this 
case. Nelson. 
U'NIFORMLY, adv. Without variation; in an even 
tenour.—The capillamenta of the nerves are each of them 
solid and uniform; and the vibrating motion of the ethereal 
medium may be propagated along them from one end to the 
other uniformly, and without interruption. Newton. — 
Without diversity of one from another. 
UNIGE'NITURE, s. The state of being the only be¬ 
gotten.—As primogeniture consisteth in prelation, so uni- 
geniture in exclusion. Pearson. 
UNIMA'GINABLE, adj. Not to be imagined by the 
fancy; not to be conceived. 
Things to their thought 
So unimaginable, as hate in heaven. Milton. 
UNIMA'GINABLY, adv. To a degree not to be ima- 
4 X gined. 
Dryden. 
Pope. 
Donne. 
