462 
U N M 
A beauty which on Psyche’s face did throw 
Unlovely blacknesse. Beaumont. 
UNLO'VING, adj. Unkind; not fond. 
Thou, blest with a goodly son, 
Didst yield consent to disinherit him; 
Which argued thee a most unloving father. Shakspeare. 
UNLU'CKILY, adv. Unfortunately ; by ill luck. 
Things have fallen out so unluckily, 
That we have had no time to move our daughter. 
Shakspeare. 
UNLUC'KINESS, s. Unfortunateness; mischievousness. 
—As there is no moral in these jests, they ought to be dis¬ 
couraged, and looked upon rather as pieces of unluckiness 
than wit. Addison. 
UNLU'CKY, adj. Unfortunate; producing unhappi¬ 
ness. This word is generally used of accidents slightly 
vexatious.—You may make an experiment often, without 
meeting with any of those unlucky accidents which make 
such experiments miscarry. Boyle.— -Unhappy ; miserable; 
subject to frequent misfortunes. 
Then shall I you recount a rueful case. 
Said he; the which with this unlucky eye 
I late beheld. Spenser. 
Slightly mischievous; mischievously waggish. 
His friendship is counterfeit, seldome to trust; 
His doings unluckie , and ever unjust. Tusser. 
Ill-omen’d; inauspicious. 
When I appear, see you avoid the place, 
And haunt me not with that unlucky face. Dryden. 
UNLU'STRQUS, adj. Wanting splendour; wanting 
lustre. 
Should I join gripes with hands 
Made hard with hourly falsehood, as with labour; 
Then glad myself with peeping in an eye, 
Base and unlustrous as the smoky light 
That’s fed with stinking tallow. Shakspeare. 
To UNLU'TE, v. a. To separate vessels closed with 
chymical cement. 
UNMA'DE, adj. Not yet formed ; not created. 
Then might’st thou tear thy hair. 
And fall upon the ground as I do now. 
Taking the measure of an unmade grave. Shakspeare. 
Deprived of form or qualities.—The first earth was per¬ 
fectly unmade again, taken all to pieces, and framed a-new. 
Woodward. —Omitted to be made. 
You may the world of more defects upbraid. 
That other works by nature are unmade; 
That she did never at her own expence 
A palace rear. Blackmore. 
UNMA'IDENLY, adj. Unbecoming a maiden.—The 
wanton gesticulations of a virgin in a wild assembly of 
gallants warmed with wine, could be no other than riggish 
and unmaidcnly. Bp. Hall. 
UNMA'IMED, adj. Not deprived of any essential part. 
Not disfigur’d in his shape, 
Enjoying all his limbs unmaim'd he lies. Sir J. Beaumont. 
UNMA'KABLE, adj. Not possible to be made.—If the 
principles of bodies are unalterable, they are also unmakable- 
by any but a divine power. Grew. 
To UNMA'KE, ». a. To deprive of former qualities be¬ 
fore possessed. To deprive of form or being. 
They’ve made themselves, and their fitness now 
Does unmake you. Shakspeare. 
UNMA'LLEABLE, adj. Not malleable.—A harsh, un- 
malleable stuff. Fanshaw. 
To UNMA'N, v. a. To deprive of the constituent quali¬ 
ties of a human being, as reason.—Gross errors unman , and 
strip them of the very principles of reason, and sober dis¬ 
course. South —To emasculate. To break into resolu¬ 
tion; to deject. 
U N M 
Her clamours pierce the Trojans’ ears, 
Unman their courage, and augment their fears. Dryden. 
UNMANAGEABLE, adj. Not manageable; not easily 
governed.—None can be concluded unmanageable by the 
milder methods of government, till they have been 
thoroughly tried upon him; and if they will not prevail, we 
make no excuses for the obstinate. Locke. —Not easily 
wielded. 
UNMA'NAGED, adj. Not broken by horsemanship.— 
Like colts, or unmanaged horses, we start at dead bones and 
lifeless blocks. Bp. Taylor. —Not tutored ; not educated.-— 
Savage princes flash out sometimes into an irregular greatness 
of thought, and betray, in their actions, an unguided force, 
and unmanage'd virtue. Felton. 
UNMANLIKE, or Unma'nly, adj. Unbecoming a 
human being.—It is strange to see the unmanlike cruelty of 
mankind, who, not content with their tyrannous ambition, 
to have brought the others’ virtuous patience under them, 
think their masterhood nothing, without doing injury to 
them. Sidney. —Where the act is unmanly or the expecta¬ 
tion contradictious to the attributes of God, our hopes we 
ought never to entertain. Collier. —-Unsuitable to a man ; 
effeminate. 
New customs, 
Though never so ridiculous, 
Nay, let them be unmanly, yet are follow’d. Shakspeare. 
UNMANNED, adj. Not furnished with men. 
Set me with him— 
Upon the main-mast of an unmann'd ship, 
And let the wind and tide hale me along. Kyd. 
Not tamed: a term of falconry. 
No colt is so unbroken, 
Or hawk yet half so haggard or unmann'd. B. Jonson. 
UNMANNERED, adj. Rude; brutal; uncivil. 
If your barking dog disturb her ease, 
Th’ unmannedd malefactor is arraign’d. Dryden. 
UNMA'NNERLINESS, s. Breach of civility; ill be¬ 
haviour.—A sort of unmannerliness is apt to grow up with 
young people, if not early restrained; and that is a forward¬ 
ness to interrupt others speaking. Locke. 
UNMANNERLY, adj. Ill bred; not civil; not com¬ 
plaisant.—He will prove the weeping philosopher, when he 
f rows old, being so full of unmannerly sadness in his youth. 
hakspeare. 
UNMANNERLY, adv. Uncivilly. 
Forgive me. 
If I have us’d myself unmannerly. Shakspeare. 
UNMANU'RED, adj. Not cultivated. 
The land, 
In antique times, was savage wilderness; 
Unpeopled, unmanur'd, unprov’d, unprais’d. Spenser. 
UNMA'RKED, adj. Not observed; not regarded.—I 
got a time, unmarked by any, to steal away, I cared not 
whither, so I might escape them. Sidney. 
UNMA'RRED, adj. Uninjured; not spoiled. 
And at the foote thereof a gentle flud 
His silver waves did safely tumble downe 
Unmarr'd with ragged mosse or filthy mud. Spenser. 
UNMA'RRIED, adj. Having no husband, or no wife. 
—Unmarried men are best friends, best masters, best ser¬ 
vants, but not always best subjects, for they are light to run 
away. Bacon. 
To UNMA’RRY, v. a. To separate from the matrimo¬ 
nial contract; to divorce.—Is it imaginable there should be 
among these a law which God allowed not, a law giving 
permissions laxative to unmarry a wife and marry a lust, a 
law to suffer a kind of tribunal-adultery ? Milton. 
To UNMA'SK, v. a. To strip of a mask.—To strip of 
any disguise.—With full cups they had unmask'd his sou). 
Roscommon. 
To UNMA'SK, v. n. To put offthe mask. 
My 
