472 
U N Q 
U N R 
Do it, 
Or thy precedent services are all 
But accidents unpurpos'd. Shakspearc. 
UNPURSU'ED, adj. Not pursued. 
All night the dreadless angel unpursu'd 
Through heaven’s wide charnpain held his way. Milton. 
TJNPU'TRIFIED, adj. Not corrupted by rottenness.— 
Meat and drink last longer unputrificd, or unsowered in 
winter than in summer. Bacon. —No animal unputrificd, 
being burnt, yields any alkaline salt; but, putrefied, yields 
a volatile alkali. Arbuthnot. 
UNQUALIFIED, adj. Not fit.—Till he has denudated 
himself of all these incumbrances, he is utterly unqualified 
for these agonies. Dec. of C/ir. Piety. —Not softened; not 
abated. 
UNQUA'LIFIEDNESS, s. State of being unqualified. 
The inadvertency and unqualifiedness of copyers. Biblioth. 
Bib/. 
To UNQUALIFY, v. a. To disqualify; to divest of 
qualification.—Arbitrary power so diminishes the basis of 
the female figure, as to unqualify a woman for an evening- 
walk. Addison. 
UNQUA'LITIED, adj. Deprived of the usual faculties. 
Not in use. —He is unqualified with very shame. Shak¬ 
speare. 
UNQUA'RRELABLE, adj. Such as cannot be im¬ 
pugned.—There arise unto the examination such satisfactory 
and unquarrelable reasons, as may confirm the causes gene¬ 
rally received. Brown. 
To UNQUE'EN, v. a. To divest of the dignity of queen. 
Embalm me. 
Then lay me forth ; although unqueen'd, yet like 
A queen, and daughter to a king, inter me. Shqkspcare 
UNQUELLED, adj. Unsubdued. 
To sing unquell'd amid the lashing wave; 
To laugh at danger. Thomson. 
Not kept down. 
Beneath thy meadows glow, and rise unquell'd 
Against the mower’s scythe. Thomson. 
UNQUENCHABLE, adj.' Unextinguishable. — We re¬ 
present wildfires burning in water and unquenchable. 
Bacon. 
The people on their holidays. 
Impetuous, insolent, unquenchable. Milton. 
UNQUE'NCHABLENESS, s. Unextinguishableness.— 
I was amazed to see the unquenchableness of this fire. 
I laic eio ill. 
UNQUE'NCHED, adj. Not extinguished. — We have 
heats of dungs, and of lime unquenched. Bacon. —Not ex- 
tinguishable.—Sadness, or great joy, equally dissipate the 
spirits, and immoderate exercise in hot air, with unquenched 
thirst. Arbuthnot. 
UNQUESTIONABLE, adj. Indubitable; not to be 
doubted.—The duke’s carriage was surely noble throughout; 
of unquestionable courage in himself, and rather fearful of 
fame than danger. 7 Votton.— That cannot bear to be ques¬ 
tioned without impatience: this seems to be the meaning 
here—What were his marks ?-A lean cheek, which you 
have not; a \\ unquestionable spirit, which you have not. 
Shakspearc. 
UNQUESTIONABLY, adv. Indubitably; without 
doubt.—If the fathers were unquestionably of the house¬ 
hold of faith, and all to do good to them; then certainly 
their children cannot be strangers in this household. Sprat. 
UNQUESTIONED, adj. Not doubled; passed with¬ 
out doubt.—Other relations in good authors, though we do 
not positively deny , yet have they not been unquestioned 
by some. Brown. —Indisputable; not to be opposed. 
It did not please the gods, who instruct the people ; 
And their unquestion'd pleasures must be served. B. Jonson. 
Not interrogated ; not examined. 
She, muttering prayers as holy rites she meant. 
Through the divided crow'd unquestion'd went- Dry den, 
UNQUI'CK, adj. Motionless; not alive. 
His senses droop, his steady eyes unquick; 
And much he ails, and yet he is not sick. Daniel . 
UNQUFCKENED, adj. Not animated ; not ripened to 
vitality. 
Every foetus bears a secret hoard, 
With sleeping, unexpanded issue stor’d; 
Which num’rous, but unquicken'd progeny. 
Clasp’d, and enwrapp’d, within each other lie. Blackmore. 
UNQUFET, adj. [inquiet, Fr.; inquietus, Lat.] Moved 
with perpetual agitation; not calm; not still.—From gram- 
matick flats and shallows, they are on the sudden transported 
to be tossed and turmoiled with their unballasted wits, in 
fathomless and unquiet depths of controversy. Milton .— 
Disturbed; full of perturbation ; not at peace. 
Go with me to church, and call me wife, 
And then away to Venice to your friend; 
For never shall you lie by Portia’s side 
With an unquiet soul. Shakspeare, 
Restless; unsatisfied. 
She glares in balls, front boxes, and the ring; 
A vain, unquiet, glitt’ring, wretched thing. Pope. 
To UNQUI'ET, v. a. To disquiet; to make uneasy.— 
Having weighed the matter, and deeply pondered the gra¬ 
vity thereof, wherewith they were greatly troubled and un¬ 
quiet ed, resolved finally that the archbishop should reveal 
the same to the king’s majesty. Ld. Herbert. 
UNQUI'ETLY, adv. Without rest. 
Who’s there besides foul weather ?-- 
-One minded like the weather, most 
Unquietly. Shakspeare. 
UNQUI'ETNESS, s. Want of tranquillity. 
Thou, like a violent noise, cam’st rushing in, 
And rnak’st them wake and start to new unquietness. 
Denham. 
Want of peace.—It is most enemy to war, and most 
hateth unquietness. Spenser. —Restlessness, turbulence. 
What pleasure can there be in that estate. 
Which your unquietness has made me hate? Dry den. 
Perturbation; uneasiness. — From inordinate love, and 
vain fear, comes all unquietness of spirit, and distraction of 
our senses. Bp. Taylor. 
UNQUI'ETUDE, s. Disquietude; uneasiness; restless¬ 
ness.—It will bewray a kind of unquietude and discontent¬ 
ment, till it attain the former position. Wotton. 
UNRA'CKED, adj. Not poured from the lees.—Rack 
the one vessel from the lees of the racked vessel into the un¬ 
racked vessel. Bacon. 
UNRA'KED, adj. Not thrown together and covered. 
Used only of fires. 
Cricket, to Windsor chimnies shalt thou leap: 
Where fires thou find’st unrak'd and hearths unswept. 
There pinch the maids. Shakspeare. 
UNRA'NSACKED, adj. Not pillaged.—He gave that 
rich city for a prey unto his soldiers, who left neither house 
nor corner thereof, unransacked. Knol/es. 
UNRA'NSOMED, adj. Not set free by payment for 
liberty. 
Unransom'd here receive the spotless fair, 
Accept the hecatomb the Greeks prepare. Pope. 
To UNRA'VEL, v. a. To disentangle; to extricate; to 
clear.—He has unravelled the studied cheats of great artificers. 
Fell. —To disorder; to throw out of the present order. 
O the traitor’s name! 
I’ll know it; I will, art shall be conjur’d for it, 
And nature all unravell’d. Dryden. 
To clear up the intrigue of a play.—The solution, or un¬ 
ravelling 
