m u ij p 
UNPE'ACEFUL, adj. Unpacific.; violent; without peace. 
—Forbid unpeaceful passions to rebel. Cow lei/. 
Rash war and perilous battle their delight, 
XJnpeaceful death their choice. Thomson. 
To UNPE'G, v. a. To open any thing closed with a peg. 
Unpeg the basket on the house’s top ; 
Let the birds fly. Shakspeare. 
UNPE'NETRABLE, adj. Impenetrable.—An unpene¬ 
trable rock, an unaccessible desert. Herbert. 
UNPENITE'NT, adj. Impenitent. 
God will not relieve the unpenitent. 
Nor to the prayers of wicked souls consent. Sandj/s. 
UNPE'NSIONED, adj. Not kept in dependence by a 
pension. 
Could pension’d Boileau lash in honest strain 
Flatt’rers and bigots, ev’n in Louis’ reign; 
And I not strip the gilding off a knave. 
Unplac’d, unpension'd , no man’s heir or slave? Pope. 
To UNPE'OPLE, v. a. To depopulate; to deprive of 
inhabitants.—Shall war unpeople this my realm ? Shahs- 
pcare. 
UNPERCETVABLE, adj. Not readily to be perceived; 
not obvious.—It enforced those precepts seemingly unrea¬ 
sonable, by such promises as were as seemingly incredible, 
and unperceivab/e. Pearson. 
UNPERCE'IVED, adj. Not observed ; not heeded; not 
sensibly discovered; not known.—The ashes, wind unper¬ 
ceived shakes off. Bacon. 
He alone, 
To find where Adam shelter’d, took his way, 
Not unperceiv'd of Adam. Milton. 
UNPERCE'IVEDLY, adv. So as not to be perceived.— 
Some oleaginous particles, unperceivedly, associated them¬ 
selves to it. Boyle. 
UNPE'RFECT, adj. [ imperfait , Fr.; imperfectus, Lat.] 
Incomplete.—Apelles’ picture of Alexander at Ephesus, and 
his Venus, which he left at his death unperfect in Chios, 
were the chiefest. Peacham. —An unperfect actor on the 
stage. Sha/cspeare. —He fell into a poor and unperfect 
account of the difference of divine miracles and diabolical; 
.which I modestly refuted. Bp. Hall. 
UNPE'RFECTED, adj. Not perfected ; not completed. 
—To see that performed, which only he left unperfected. 
Hammond. 
UNPE'RFECTLY, adv. Imperfectly.—The mind of a 
man distracted amongst many things, must needs entertain 
them brokenly and imperfectly. Hales. 
UNPE'RFECTNESS, s. imperfection; incompleteness. 
—Virgil and Horace, spying the unperfectness in Ennius 
and Plautus, by true imitation of Homer and Euripides, 
brought poetry to perfectness. Ascham. 
UNPE'RFORMED, adj. Undone; not done.—A good 
law without execution, is like an unperformed promise. Bp. 
Taylor. 
UNPE'RFORMING, adj. Not discharging its office. 
O unperforming hand! 
That never could’st have err’d in a worse time. Dryden. 
This is so unperforming an hypothesis, that it answers for 
nothing. A. Baxter. 
UNPE'RISIIABLE, adj. Lasting to perpetuity ; exempt 
from decay.—We are secured to reap in another world ever¬ 
lasting, unperishable felicities. Hammond. 
UNPE'RISHED, adj. Not violated; not destroyed.—He 
presumed, that faith being observed unperished should please 
Almighty God above all things. Sir T. Elyot. 
UNPE'RJURED, adj. Free from perjury. 
Beware of death; thou can’st not die unperjur'd. 
And leave an unaccomplish’d love behind : 
Thy vows are mine. Dryden. 
To UNPERPLE'X, v. a. To relieve from perplexity. 
U N P 
This extasy.dolh unperplex 
(We said) and tell us what we love. Donne. 
UNPERPLE'XED, ddj. Disentangled ; not embarrassed. 
—In learning, little should be proposed to the mind at once* 
and that being fully mastered, proceed to the next adjoining 
part, yet unknown, simple unperplexed proposition. Locke. 
UNPERSPl'RABLE, adj. Not to be emitted through the 
pores of the skin.—Bile is the most unperspirable of animal 
fluids. Arbuthnot. 
UNPERSUA'DABLE, adj. Inexorable ; not to be per¬ 
suaded.—He, finding his sister’s unpersuadable melancholy, 
through the love of Amphialus, had for a time left her court. 
Sidney. 
UNPE'TRIFIED, adj. Not turned to stone.—In many 
concreted plants, some parts remain unpetrified; that is, 
the quick and livelier parts remain as wood, and were never 
yet converted. Brown. 
UNPHILOSO'PHICAL, adj. Unsuitable to the rules of 
philosophy, or right reason.—Your conceptions are unphilo- 
sophical. You forget that the brain has a great many small 
fibres in its texture; which, according to the different strokes 
they receive from the animal spirits, awaken a correspondent 
idea. Collier. 
UNPHILOSO'PHICALLY, adv. In a manner contrary 
to the rules of right reason.—They forget that he is the first 
cause of all things, and discourse most unphilosophically, 
absurdly, and unsuitably to the nature of an infinite being; 
whose influence must set the first wheel a-going. South. 
UNPHILOSO'PHICALNESS, 5. Incongruity with philo¬ 
sophy.—I could dispense with the unphilosophicalness of 
this their hypothesis were it not unchristian. Norris. 
To UNPHILQ'SOPHIZE, v. a. To degrade from the 
character of a philosopher. A word made by Pope. —Our 
passions, our interests flow in upon us, and unphilosophize 
us into mere mortals. Pope. 
UNPHY'SICKED, adj. Not indebted to medicine; not 
influenced by medicine.'—Free limbs, unphysick'd health, 
due appetite. Howell. 
UNPIE'RCED, adj. Not penetrated; not pierced.—The 
unpierc'd shade imbrown’d the noontide bow’rs. Milton. 
True Witney broad-cloth, with its shag unshorn. 
Unpierc'd, is in the lasting tempest worn. day. 
UNPI'LLARED, adj. Deprived of pillars. 
See the cirque falls! the unpillar'd temple nods! 
Streets pav’d with heroes! Tiber choak’d with gods! Pope. 
UNPI'LLOWED, adj. Wanting a pillow. 
Perhaps some cold bank is her bolster now. 
Or ’gainst the rugged bark of some broad elm. 
Leans her unpillow'd head, fraught with sad fears. Milton. 
To UNPI'N, v. a. To open what is shut, or fastened 
with a pin. 
Unpin that spangled breast-plate which you wear, 
That the eyes of busy fools may be stopt there. Donne. 
UNPI'NKED, adj. Not marked with eyelet holes— 
Gabriel’s pumps were all unpink'd i’ th’ heel. Shakspeare. 
UNPl'TIED, aclj. Not compassionated; not regarded 
with sympathetical sorrow. 
Richard yet lives; but at hand, at hand 
Insues his piteous and unpitied end. Shakspeare. 
UNPI'TIFUL, adj. Not merciful.—Not exciting pity. 
Future times, in love, may pity her; 
Sith graces such unpitiful should prove. Davies. 
UNPI'TIFULLY, adv. Unmercifully ; without mercy. 
He beat him most pitifully. 
—Nay, that he did not; he beat him most unpitifully. 
Shakspeare. 
UNPI'TYING, adj. Having no compassion. 
To shame, to chains, or to a certain grave. 
Lead on, unpitying guides, behold your slave. Granville, 
UNPLA'CABLE, adj. Not to be appeased; implacable. 
—Boiling 
