464 
U N M 
will unmingle the wine from the water; the wine ascending, 
and the water descending. Bacon. 
UNMI'NGLEABLE, adj. Not susceptive of mixture. 
Not used .—The sulphur of the concrete loses by the fer¬ 
mentation, the property of oil being unmingleable with 
water. Boyle. 
UNMI'NGLED, adj. Pure; not vitiated by any thing 
mingled. 
Vessels of unmingled wine. 
Mellifluous, undecaying, and divine. Pope. 
UNMl'RY, adj. Not fouled with dirt. 
Pass, with safe, unmiry feet, 
Where the rais’d pavement leads athwart the street. Gay. 
UNMFSSED, adj. Not missed.—Why should he not 
steal away, unasked and unmissed, till the hurry of passions 
in those, that should have guarded him, was a little abated ? 
Gray. 
UNMI'TIGABLE, adj. That may not be softened. 
She did confine thee, 
By help cf her more potent ministers, 
And in her most unmitigable rage, 
Into a cloven pine. Shakspeare. 
UNMITIGATED, adj. Not softened.—With public 
accusation, uncovered slander, unmitigated rancour. Shak~ 
speare. 
UNMI'XED, or Unmi'xt, adj. Not mingled with any 
thing ; pure; not corrupted by additions. 
Thy commandment all alone shall live 
Within the book and volume of my brain. 
Unmix'd with baser matter. Shakspeare. 
Together out they fly. 
Inseparable now, the truth and lie : 
And this or that unmix t no mortal ear shall find. Pope. 
UNMO'ANED, adj. Not lamented. 
Fatherless distress was left unmoan'd; 
Your widow dolours likewise be unwept. Shakspeare. 
UNMOI'ST, adj. Not wet. 
Volatile Hermes, fluid and unmoist, 
Mounts on the wings of air. Philips. 
UNMOI'STENED, adj. Not made wet.—The incident 
light that meets with a grosser liquor, will have its beams 
more or less interruptedly reflected, than they would be if 
the body had been unmoistened. Boyle. 
UNMOLE'STED, adj. Free from disturbance ; free 
from external troubles. 
Safe on my shore each unmolested swain, 
Shall tend the flocks, or reap the bearded grain. Pope. 
UNMO'NIED, adj. Having no moneys wanting 
money. 
Apples with cabbage-net y-cover’d o’er. 
Galling full sore lh’ unmonied wight, are seen. Shenstone 
To UNMONO'POLIZE, v. a. To rescue from being 
monopolized .—Unrnonopolizing the rewards of learning 
and industry from the greasy clutch of ignorance and high 
feeding. Milton. 
To UNMO'OR, v. a. To loose from land, by taking 
up the anchors. 
We with the rising morn our ships unmoor'd 
And brought our captives, and our stores aboard. Pope. 
Prior seems to have taken it for casting anchor. 
Soon as the British ships unmoor. 
And jolly long-boat rows to shore. Prior. 
UNMO'RALIZED, adj. Untutored by morality.—This 
is censured as the mark of a dissolute and unmoralized 
temper. Norris. 
UNMORTGAGED, adj. Not mortgaged.—This he 
has repeated so often, that at present there is scarce a single 
able unmortgaged. Addison. 
UNMO'RTIFIED, adj. Not subdued by sorrow and 
U N N 
severities. If our conscience reproach us with unmortijied 
sin, our hope is the hope of an hypocrite. Rogers. 
UNMO'VABLE, adj. Such as cannot be removed or 
altered.—Wherein consists the precise and unmovable 
boundaries of that thick species. Locke. 
UNMO'VABLY, adv. Unalterably.—As the good angels 
are unalterably determined to choose what is good ; so the 
evil angels are as unmoveably determined still to adhere to 
that which is evil. Ellis. 
UNMO'VED, adj. Not put out of one place into an¬ 
other. 
Nor winds, nor winter’s rage o’erthrows 
His bulky body, but unmov'd he grows. Dry den. 
Not changed in resolution. 
Among innumerable false, unmov'd. 
Unshaken, unseduc’d. Milton. 
Not affected ; not touched with any passion. 
Caesar the world’s great master and his own. 
Unmov'd, superiour still in every state. 
And scarce detested in his country’s fate. Pope. 
Unaltered by passion. 
I meant to meet 
My fate with face unmov'd, and eyes unwet. Dryden. 
UNMO'VING, adj. Having no motion.—The celestial 
bodies, without impulse, had continued unactive, unmoving 
heaps of matter. Cheyne .—Having no power to raise the 
passions; unaffecting. 
To UNMO'ULD, v. a. To change as to the form. 
Its pleasing poison 
The visage quite transforms of him that drinks. 
And the inglorious likeness of a beast 
Fixes instead, unmoulding reason’s mintage, 
Character’d in the face. Milton . 
UNMO'URNED, adj. Not lamented ; not deplored. 
O let me here sink down 
Into my grave unmention’d and unmourn'd. Southern. 
To UNMU'FFLE, v. a. To put off a covering from the 
face. 
Unmujjlc, ye faint stars ! and thou fair moon, 
That wont’st to love the traveller’s benizon. 
Stoop thy pale visage through an amber cloud. 
And disinherit chaos, that reigns here 
In double night, of darkness and of shades. Milton. 
UNMU'RMURED, adj. Not murmured at—It may 
pass unmurmur'd, undisputed. Beaum. and FI. 
UNMU'SICAL, adj. Not harmonious; not pleasing by 
sound. 
Let argument bear no unmusical sound. 
Nor jars interpose, sacred friendship to grieve. B. Jonson. 
To UNMU'ZZLE, v. a. To loose from a muzzle—Now 
unmuzzle your wisdom. Shakspeare. 
UNNA, a considerable river in the north-west of European. 
Turkey, which rises in the mountains of Herzegovina, flows 
through Bosnia along the border of Croatia, and falls into 
the Save at Uszticza. It is navigable for a considerable dis¬ 
tance from its mouth. 
UNNA, a small town of Prussian Westphalia, in the 
county of Mark, on a small stream called the Kettlebeck. 
It has 2400 inhabitants. 18 miles N. E. of Arensberg. 
UNNA'MED, adj. Not mentioned. 
Author of evil, unknown till thy revolt, 
Unnam'd in heav’n. Milton. 
Not having received a name.—Things by their names I 
call, though yet unnam'd. Milton. 
UNNATIVE, adj. Not native. 
Whence this unnative fear, 
To generous Britons never known before ? Thomson. 
UNNATURAL, adj. Contrary to the laws of nature; 
contrary to the common instincts. 
Her 
