U N I 
wisdom would be in a great measure useless, and their expe¬ 
rience uninstructive. Addison. 
UNINTELLIGENT, adj. Not knowing; not skilful; 
not having any consciousness.—We will give you sleepy 
drinks, that your senses may be unintelligent of our insuf- 
ficience. Shakspeare. 
UNINTELLIGIBI'LITY, s. Quality of not being intel¬ 
ligible.— Credit the unintelligibility of this union and 
motion. Glanvil/e. 
UNINTELLIGIBLE, adj. [inynteliigible, Fr.] Not 
such as can be understood.—The Latin, three hundred years 
before Tully, was as unintelligible in his time, as the English 
and French of the same period are now. Swift. 
UNINTELLIGIBLENESS, s. State of being unintel¬ 
ligible.—I require our theorist to shew us some inconvenience 
or unintelligibleness in the one more than in the other. Bp. 
Herb. 
UNINTELLIGIBLY, adv. In a manner not to be un¬ 
derstood.—To talk of specific differences in nature, without 
reference to general ideas, is to talk unintelligibly. Locke. 
UNINTENTIONAL, adj. Not designed; happening 
without design.—Besides the unintentional deficiencies of 
my style, I have purposely transgressed the laws of oratory, 
in making my periods over-long. Boyle. 
UNI'NTERESSED, or Uni'nterested, adj. Not hav¬ 
ing interest. —The greatest part of an audience is always un- 
inter essed, though seldom knowing. Dry den. 
UNINTERESTING, adj. Exciting no interest.—The 
details rise far above the uninteresting precision of patient 
annalists. War ton. 
UNINTERMl'TTED, adj. Continued ; not interrupted. 
—This motion of the heavenly bodies seems to be partly 
continued and unintermitted , as that motion of the first 
moveable partly interpolated and interrupted. Hale. 
UNINTERMI'TTING, adj. Having no interruption; 
continuing.—To procure an unintermitting joy; to draw 
life into perpetuity; to keep back the eclipsing sadnesses of 
the mind :—this is beyond a Solomon. Fcltham. 
UNINTE'RPOLATED, adj. Not interpolated.—Berri- 
man and Ernesti think that authenticce means no more than 
genuine, uninterpolated. Porson. 
UNINTERMI'XED, adj. Not mingled. 
Unintermix'd with fictious fantasies, 
I versify the truth, not poetize. Daniel. 
UNINTERRU'PTED, adj. Not broken; not interrupted. 
Thy constant quiet fills my peaceful breast 
With unmixt joy, uninterrupted rest. Roscom?non. 
UNINTERRUPTEDLY, adv. Without interruption.— 
A successive augmentation uninterruptedly continued, in 
an actual existence of believing and congregations in all 
ages unto the end of the world. Pearson. 
UNINTRE'NCHED, adj. Not intrenched.—It had been 
cowardice in the Trojans, not to have attempted any thing 
against an army that lay unfortified and unintrenched. Pope. 
UNl'NTRICATED, adj. Not perplexed; not obscure. 
—Even, clear, unintricated designs. Hammond. 
UNINTRODU'CED, adj. Not properly conducted; not 
duly ushered in; obtrusive.—Think not, unintroduc'd I 
force my way. Young. 
UNINVENTED, adj. Undiscovered. 
Not uninvented that, which thou aright 
Believ’st so main to our success, I bring. Milton. 
UNINVE'STIGABLE, adj. Not to be searched out— 
The number of the works of this visible world being unin- 
vestigable by us, afford us a demonstrative proof of the un¬ 
limited extent of the Creator’s skill. Ray. 
UNINVI'TED, adj. Not asked. 
His honest friends, at thirsty hour of dusk, 
Come uninvited. Philips. 
UNINU'RED, adj. Unaccustomed; not habituated. 
Protected mice. 
The race exiguous, uninur'd to wet, 
Their mansions quit, and other countries seek. Philips. 
UNI -455 
To UNJOIN', v. a. To separate; to disjoin. [They] un¬ 
joy nen the things that ben conjoyned. Chaucer. 
UNJOINTED, adj. Disjoined; separated. 
I hear the sound of words; their sense the air 
Dissolves unjointed ere it reach my ear. Milton. 
Having no articulation.—They are all three immoveable 
or unjointed, of the thickness of a little pin. Grew. 
UNIOLA [Dimin. from the union of the glumes], in Bo¬ 
tany, a genus of the class triandria, order digynia, natural 
order of gramina, grammes (Juss .)—Generic Character. 
Calyx: glume many-flowered, many-valved; valves imbri¬ 
cate in a double row, awl-shaped, compressed, navicular, 
keeled, one closed over the other; the last pair many-flow¬ 
ered, containing an ovate flatted spikelet, sharp at the edge. 
Corolla two-valved; valves lanceolate-compressed, like those 
of the calyx; the inner valve surpassing the other a little. 
Stamina: filaments three, capillary. Anthers oblong, li¬ 
near. Pistil: germ conical. Styles two, erect, simple. Stig¬ 
mas pubescent. Pericarp none. Corolla incloses the seed. 
Seed one, ovate-oblong.— Essential Character. Calyx 
many-valved. Spikelet ovate, keeled. 
1. Uniola paniculata.—Panicled, spikelets ovate.—Native 
of Virginia and Carolina. Called there sea-side oat. 
2. Uniola mucronata.—Spike distich; spikelets ovate; 
calyxes somewhat awned. Culm a foot high, even. Leaves 
narrow, smooth, with striated sheaths.—Native of the East 
Indies. 
3. Uniola spicata.—Subspiked; leaves rolled in, rigid. 
Culm a span high, with alternate rigid leaves, rolled in and 
mucronate.—- Native of North America on the coast. 
UNION, $. [unio, Lat.] The act of joining two or more 
so as to make them one. 
Adam, from whose dear side I boast me sprung, 
And gladly of our union hear thee speak, 
One heart, one soul in both! Milton. 
Concord; conjunction of mind or interests.—The expe¬ 
rience of those profitable emanations from God, most com¬ 
monly are the first motive of our love; but when we once 
have tasted his goodness, we love the spring for its own ex¬ 
cellency, passing from considering ourselves, to an union 
with God. Bp. Taylor .—A pearl. Not in use. 
The king shall drink to Hamlet’s better breath; 
And in the cup an union shall he throw. 
Richer than that which four successive kings 
In Denmark’s crown have worn. Shakspeare. 
UNION, one of the Grenadine islands, in the West Indies. 
Lat. 12. 30. N. long. 61. 20. W.—2. A river of the United 
States, in Maine, which runs south into Blue Hill bay.—3. A 
post township of the United States, in Lincoln county, 
Maine. Population 1266.—4. A township of the United 
States, in Tolland county, Connecticut. Population 752.—5. 
A township of the United States, in Broome county, New 
York, on the Susquehannah.—6. A post village of the. 
United States, in Nassau couuty. New York.—7. A post 
village of the United States, in Greenwich county. New 
York.—8. A village of the United States, in Bern county, 
New York.—9. A post village of the United States, in Peru 
county. New York.—10. A township of the United States, 
in Essex county. New Jersey.—11. A post township and 
borough of the United States, and capital of Fayette county, 
Pennsylvania, on the Redstone.—12. A township of the 
United States, in Huntingdon county, Pennsylvania.—13. A 
township of the United States, in Fayette county, Pennsyl¬ 
vania.—14. A township of the United States, in Mifflin 
county, Pennsylvania.—15. A county of the United States, 
in Pennsylvania.—16. A post township of the United States, 
in Loudon county, Virginia. — 17. Union, or Sha/cerstown, 
a township of the United States, in Warren county, Ohio. 
It is a pleasant settlement of Shakers.—18. A township of the 
United States, in Knox county, Ohio.—19. A township of 
the United States, in Licking county, Ohio.—20. A town¬ 
ship of the United States, in Madison county, Ohio.—21. A 
township of the United States, in Miami county, Ohio.—22. 
A township 
