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U N P 
UNO’WNED, adj. Having no owner. Not acknow¬ 
ledged ; not claimed. 
Of night or loneliness it recks me not; 
I fear the dread events that dog them both. 
Lest some ill-greeting touch attempt the person 
Of our unowned sister. Milton. 
UNPACI'FIC, adj. Not of a peaceable turn ; not gentle. 
.—Many such works of our disunited and unpacific ancestors 
were undoubtedly destroyed, either by their first constructors, 
or by new invaders, by agreement or by conquest, and some¬ 
times by civil dissensions, in the early martial ages. Warton. 
UNPA'CIFIED, adj. ■ Not composed ; not calmed. 
A westerne, mild and pretty whispering gale 
Came dallying with the leaves along the dale, 
And seem'd as with the water it did chide, 
Because it ranne so long unpacked. Browne. 
To UNPA'CK, v. a. To disburden ; to exonerate. 
I, the son of a dear father murther’d, 
Must, like a whore, unpack my heart with words. 
Shakspeare. 
To open any thing bound together.—He had a great parcel 
of glasses packed up, which, when he had unpacked, a great 
many cracked of themselves. Boyle. 
UNPA'CKED, adj. Not collected by unlawful artifices. 
The knight 
Resolv’d to leave him to the fury 
Of justice, and an unpack'd jury. Hudibras. 
UNPA'ID, adj. Not discharged.—Receive from us knee- 
tribute not unpaid. Milton. —Not receiving dues or debts. 
Th’ embroider’d suit, at least, he deem’d his prey; 
That suit an unpaid taylor snatch’d away. Pope, 
UNPA'ID for. That for which the price is not yet given; 
taken on trust. 
Richer, than doing nothing for a bauble; 
Prouder, than rustling in unpaid for silk. Shakspeare . 
UNPA'INED, adj. Suffering no pain. 
Too unequal work we find, 
Against unequal arms to fight in pain ; 
Against unpain'd, impassive. Milton. 
UNPA'INFUL, adj. Giving no pain.—That is generally 
called hard, which will put us to pain, sooner than change 
figure 5 and that soft, which changes the situation of its 
parts, upon an easy and unpainful touch. Locke. 
UNPA'LATABLE, adj. Nauseous; disgusting. 
The man who laughed but once to see an ass 
Mumbling to make the cross-grain’d thistles pass. 
Might laugh again to see a jury chaw 
The prickles of unpalatable law. Dryden. 
To UNPA'RADISE, v. a. To deprive of happiness re¬ 
sembling that of paradise. This is an old word. “ Un- 
paradiz'd, brought from joy to misery.” Cockeram. 
Could you, so rich in rapture, fear an end. 
That ghastly thought would drink up all your joy, 
And quite unparadise the realms of light. Young. 
UNPA'RAGONED, adj. Unequalled; unmatched.— 
Either your unparagon'd mistress is dead, or she is out- 
priz’d by a trifle. Shakspeare. 
UNPARALLELED, adj. Not matched; not to be 
matched; having no equal. 
I have been 
The book of his good acts, whence men have read 
His fame, unparallel'd, haply amplified. Shakspeare. 
UNPARDONABLE, adj. \_impardonable, Fr.] Irremis- 
sible.—Oh, ’tis a fault too unpardonable. Shakspeare. 
GNPA'RDONABLY, adv. Beyond forgiveness.—Luther’s 
conscience turns these reasonings upon him, and infers, that 
Luther must have been unpardonably wicked in using masses 
for fifteen years. Atterbury. 
UNPA'RDONED, adj. Not forgiven.—How know we 
that our souls shall not this night be required, laden with 
U N P 
those unpardoned sins, for which we proposed to repent to¬ 
morrow. Rogers. —Not discharged; not cancelled by a 
legal pardon.—My returning into England unpardoned, 
hath destroyed that opinion. Ralegh. 
UNPA'RDONING, adj. Not forgiving. 
Curse on the unpardoning prince whom tears can draw 
To no remorse; who rules by lion’s law; 
And deaf to prayers, by no submission bow’d, 
Rends all alike, the penitent and proud. Dryden. 
UNPA'RLIAMENTARINESS, s. Contrariety to the 
usage or constitution of parliament.—Sensible he was of that 
disrespect, reprehending them for the unparliamentariness 
of their remonstrance in print. Clarendon. 
UNPARLIAMENTARY, adj. Contrary to the rules of 
parliament.—The secret of all this unprecedented proceeding 
in their masters, they must not impute to their freedom in 
debate, but to that unparliamentary abuse of setting indivi¬ 
duals upon their shoulders, who were hated by God and man. 
Swift. 
UNPA'RTED, adj. Undivided ; not separated. 
Too little it eludes the dazzled sight, 
Becomes mix’d blackness, or unparted light. Prior. 
UNPA'RTIAL, adj. Equal; honest; not now in use.— 
Clear evidence of truth, after a serious and unpartial exa¬ 
mination. Sanderson. 
UNPA'RTIALLY, adv. Equally; indifferently.—Deem 
it not impossible for you to err; sift unpartially your own 
hearts, whether it be force of reason, or vehemency of affec¬ 
tion, which hath bred these opinions in you. Hooker. 
UNPA'SSABLE, adj. Admitting no passage.—Every 
country which shall not do according to these things, shall 
be made not only unpassab/e for men, but most hateful 
to wild beasts. Esther. —Not current; not suffered to pass. 
—Making a new standard for money, must make all money 
which is lighter than that standard, unpassable. Locke. 
UNPA'SSIONATE, or Unpa'ssionated, adj. Free 
from passion ; calm ; impartial.—More sober heads have a 
set of misconceits, which are as absurd to an unpassionated 
reason, as those to our unbiassed senses. G/anville. 
UNPA'SSIONATELY, adv. Without passion.—Make 
us unpassionately to see the light of reason and religion. 
King Charles. 
UNPA'STORAL, adj. Not pastoral; not becoming pas¬ 
toral manners.—One of them closes his bitter complaint with 
this very unpathetic and unpastoral idea — that “ the port¬ 
cullis of the castle of his heart was fallen.” Warton. 
UNPA'THED, adj. Untracked; unmarked by passage. 
A course more promising. 
Than a wild dedication of yourselves 
To unpath'd waters, undream’d shores; most certain. 
To miseries enough. Shakspeare. 
UNPATHETIC, adj. Not passionate; not moving. See 
an example of the word under unpastoral. 
UN PATRONIZED, adj. Not having a patron.— Un¬ 
patronized, and unsupported, he cleared himself by the open¬ 
ness of innocence, and the consistence of truth. Johnson. 
UNPA'TTERNED, adj. Having no equal—Should I 
prise you less, unpattern'a sir ? Beaum. and FI. 
UNPA'VED, adj. Not paved.—The streets of the city 
lying then unpaved. Hakewill. 
UNPA'WNED, adj. Not given to pledge. 
He roll’d his eyes, that witness’d huge dismay, 
Where yet unpawn'd, much learned lumber lay. Pope. 
To UNPA'Y, v. a. Not to pay; not to compensate.— 
Whilst thy unpay'd musicians, crickets, sing. Lovelace .— 
To undo. A low ludicrous word. —Pay her the debt you 
owe her, and unpay the villainy you have done her: the one 
you may do with sterling money, and the other with current 
repentance. Shakspeare. 
UNPE'ACEABLE, adj. Quarrelsome; inclined to dis¬ 
turb the tranquillity of others.—The design is to restrain men 
from things, which make them miserable to themselves, un- 
peaceable and troublesome to the world. Tillotson. 
UNPE'ACEFUL, 
