463 
U N M 
My husband bids me; now 1 will unmask. 
This is that face was worth the looking on. Shakspeare. 
UNMA'SKED, adj. Naked; open to the view. 
O I am yet to learn a statesman’s art; 
My kindness, and my hate unmask'd I wear, 
For friends to trust, and enemies to fear. Dry den. 
UNMA'STERABLE, adj. Unconquerable; not to be 
subdued.—The factor is unmastcrable by the natural heat of 
man ; not to be dulcified by concoction, beyond unsavoury 
condition. Brown. 
UNMA'STERED, adj. Not subdued.—Not conquera¬ 
ble. 
Weigh what loss your honour may sustain, if you 
Or lose your heart, or your chaste treasure open 
To his unmaster'd importunity. Shakspeare. 
UNMA'TCHARLE, adj. Unparalleled; unequalled. 
UNMA'TCHED, adj. Matchless; having no match, or 
equal. 
That glorious day, which two such navies saw. 
As each, unmatch'd, might to the world give law ; 
Neptune, yet doubtful whom he should obey. 
Held to them both the trident of the sea. Dry den. 
UNMEANING, adj. Expressing no meaning; having 
no meaning.—-With round, unmeaning face. Pope. 
UNMEANT, adj. Not intended. 
The flying spear was after Ilus sent: 
But Rhaetas happen’d on a death unmeant. Dry den. 
UNMEASURABLE, adj. Boundless; unbounded. 
Common mother! thou 
Whose womb unmeasurable, and infinite breast. 
Teems and feeds all. Shakspeare. 
UNMEASURABLY, ado. Beyond all bounds; beyond 
measure.—Men who think so unmeasurably of themselves, as 
the deists. Leslie. 
UNMEASURED, adj. Immense; infinite. 
Does the sun dread the imaginary sign, 
Nor farther yet in liquid aether roll, 
Till he has gain’d some unfrequented place. 
Lost to the world in vast, unmeasur'd space. Blackmore. 
Not measured; plentiful beyond measure.—From him all 
perfect good, unmeasur'd out, descends. Milton. 
UNME'DDLING, adj. Not interfering with the affairs 
of others.—-A good wife, a tender mother, and an unmed- 
dling queen. Ld. Chesterfield. 
UNME'DDLINGNESS, s. Absence of interposition or 
intermeddling.—If then we be but sojourners and that in a 
strange land, here must be an aitjaypoa-ovt], an unmedlingness 
with these worldly concernments. Bp. Hall. 
UNME'DDLED with, adj. Not touched; not altered. 
—The flood-gate is opened and closed for six days, con¬ 
tinuing other ten days unmeddled with. Carew. 
UNME'DITATED, adj. Not formed by previous 
thought. 
Neither various style. 
Nor holy rapture, wanted they, to praise 
Their Maker, in fit strains pronounc’d, or sung 
Unmeditated. Milton. 
UNMEE'T, adj. [unmete, Sax.] Not fit; not proper; 
not worthy. 
Prove you that any man with me convers’d 
At hours unmeet, refuse me, hate me. Shakspeare. 
UNMEE'TLY, ado. Not properly; not suitably. 
So both together travell’d, till they met 
With a faire may den clad in mourning weed 
Upon a mangy jade unmeetly set. Spenser. 
UNMEE'TNESS, s. [unmetnyppe, Sax.] Unfitness; 
unsuitableness.—He that loved not to see the disparity of 
several cattle at the plough, cannot be pleased with vast un¬ 
meet ness in marriage. Milton. 
UNME'LLOWED, adj. Not fully ripened. 
U N M 
His years but young, but his experience old ; 
His head unmellow'd, but his judgement ripe. Shakspeare. 
UNMELO'DIOUS, adj. Harsh; grating; not melo¬ 
dious. 
The ruthless driver goads them on, 
And ay of barking dogs the bitter throng 
Makes them renew their unmelodious moan. Thomson. 
UNME'LTED, adj. Undissolved by heat. 
Snow on iEtna does unmelted lie. 
Whence rowling flames, and scatter’d cinders fly. Waller. 
UNME'NTIONED, adj. Not told 1 ; not named.—They 
left not any error in government unmentioned or unpressed, 
with the sharpest and most pathetical expressions. Cla¬ 
rendon. 
UNMERCHANTABLE, adj. Unsaleable; not vend¬ 
ible.—They feed on salt, unmerchantable pilchard. Ca¬ 
rew. 
UNMERCIFUL, adj. Cruel; severe; inclement.— 
For the humbling of this unmerciful pride in the eagle, pro¬ 
vidence has found out a way. L'Estrange. —Unconscion¬ 
able; exorbitant.—Not only the peace of the honest, un- 
writing subject was daily molested, but unmerciful de¬ 
mands Were made of his applause. Pope. 
UNMERCIFULLY, ado. Without mercy; without 
tenderness.—A little warm fellow fell most unmercifully 
upon his Gallick majesty. Addison. 
UNMERCIFULNESS, s. Inclemency; cruelty; want 
of tenderness.—Consider the rules of friendship, lest in justice 
turn into unmercifulness. Bp. Taylor. 
UNMERIT ABLE, adj. Having no desert. Not in use 
Your love deserves my thanks; but my desert 
Unmeritable, shuns your high request. Shakspeare. 
UNMERITED, adj. Not deserved; not obtained other¬ 
wise than by favour. 
This day, in whom all nations shall be blest. 
Favour unmerited by me, who sought 
Forbidden knowledge by forbidden means. Milton . 
UNMERITEDNESS, s. State of being undeserved.— 
As to the freeness or unmeritedness of God’s love; we need 
but consider, that we so little could at first deserve his love, 
that he loved us even before we had a being. Boyle. 
UNME'T, adj. Not met. 
Winds lose their strength, when they do empty fly. 
Unmet of woods or buildings. B. Jonsotv 
UNMI'GHTY, adj. [unmihtij, Sax., impotens .] No 
powerful; weak. 
UNMI'LD, adj. [unmilb, Saxon, immitis. ] Not mild; 
fierce. 
UNMI'LDNESS, s. Want of mildness.—Whereas the 
terrour of the law was a servant to amplify and illustrate the 
mildness of grace; now, the unmildness of evangelic grace 
shall turn servant, to declare the grace and mildness of the 
rigorous law. Milton. 
UNMFLKED, adj. Not milked. 
The ewes still folded with distended thighs, 
Unmilk'd, lay bleating in distressful cries. Pope. 
UNMFLLED, adj. [of coin.] Not milled. Mason. — 
It is called by some the unmitted guinea, as having no grain¬ 
ing upon the rim. Leake. 
UNMI'NDED, adj. Not heeded; not regarded. 
He was 
A poor, unminded outlaw, sneaking home; 
My father gave him welcome to the shore. Shakspeare. 
UNMINDFUL," adj. Not heedful; not regardful; ne¬ 
gligent ; inattentive.—I shall let you see, that I am not un- 
mindful of the things you would have me remember. Boyle. 
UNMINDFULLY, ado. Carelessly. Scott. 
UNMINDFULNESS, s. Carelessness; heedlessness; 
negligence; inattention. Scott. 
To UNMINGLE, v. a. To separate things mixed. — It 
will 
