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U N R 
form.—The rule of faith is alone unmoveable and unre- 
forrnable ; to wit, of believing in one only God omnipotent, 
creator of the world, and in his son Jesus Christ born of the 
virgin Mary. Hammond. 
UNREFO'IIMED, adj. Not amended; not corrected.— 
This general revolt, when overcome, produced a general 
reformation of the Irishry, which ever before had been 
unreformed. Davies. 
UNRE'FRACTED, adj. Not refracted.—The sun’s cir¬ 
cular image is made by an unrefracted beam of light. 
Newt on. 
UNREFRE'SHED, adj. Not cheered; not relieved.— 
Rs symptoms are a spontaneous lassitude, being unrefreshed 
by sleep. Arhuthnot. 
UNREGA'RDED, adj. Not heeded; not respected; 
neglected. 
We, ever by his might, 
Had thrown to ground the unregarded right. Spenser. 
UNREGE'NERACY, s. State of being unregenerate.— 
If a sinful disposition disannul our prayers, much more a 
state of unregcneracy. South. 
UNREGE'NERATE, adj. Not brought to a new life.— 
This is not to be understood promiscuously of all men, un- 
rcgenerate persons as well as regenerate. Stephens. 
UNREGISTERED, adj. Not recorded. 
Hotter hours. 
Unregister'd in vulgar fame, you have 
Luxuriously pick’d out. Shakspeare. 
UNRE’INED, adj. Not restrained by the bridle. 
Lest from thy flying steed unrein'd, as once 
Bellerophon, though from a lower clime 
Dismounted, on th’ Aleian field I fall. Milton, 
UNREJOICING, adj. Unjoyous; gloomy; sad; dis¬ 
mal.—Here Winter holds his unrejoicing court.— Thomson. 
—Siberia’s unrejoicing wilds. Wart.on. 
UNRELATED, adj. Not allied by kindred.—’Tis not 
the example of an ordinary or inconsiderable person, of a 
stranger, of one indifferent or unrelated to us. Barrow. — 
Having no connection with any thing.—They arise—from 
the purposed conciseness of the writer; who in the occasional 
mention of any matter unrelated, or not essential to, the 
dispensation, always affects a studied brevity. Warburton. 
UNRE'LATIVE, adj. Having no relation to, or con¬ 
nection with.—If you pitch upon the treaty of Munster, do 
not interrupt it by dipping and deviating into other books 
unrelative to it. Ld. Chesterfeld. 
UNRE'LATIVELY, adj. Without relation to any thing 
else.—They saw the measures they took, singly and unrda¬ 
tively, or relatively alone to some immediate object. Ld. 
Bolingbroke. 
UNRELENTING, adj. Hard; cruel; feeling no pity. 
By many hands your father was subdu’d; 
But only slaughter’d by the ireful arm 
Of unrelenting Clifford. Shakspeare. 
UNRELIE'VABLE, adj. Admitting no succour.—As 
no degree of distress is unrelievable by his power, so no 
extremity of it is inconsistent with his compassion. Boyle. 
UNRELIE'VED, adj. Not succoured. 
The goddess griev’d. 
Her favour’d host shou’d perish unreliev'd. Dryden. 
Not eased.—The uneasiness of unrelieved thirst is not les¬ 
sened by continuance, but grows the more unsupportable. 
Boyle. 
UNREMA'RKABLE, adj. Not capable of being ob¬ 
served —Our understanding, to make a complete notion, 
must add something else to this fleeting and unremarkable 
superficies, that may bring it to our acquaintance. Digby. 
—Not worthy of notice. 
UNREME'DIABLE, adj. Admitting no remedy.—He 
so handled it, that it rather seemed he had more come into a 
defence of an unremediable mischief already committed, 
than that they had done it at first by his consent. Sidney. 
UNRE'MEDIED, adj. Not cured.— Unremedied loneli¬ 
ness. Milton. 
UNREME'MBERED, adj. Not retained in the mind; 
not recollected.—I cannot pass unremembered, their man¬ 
ner of disguising the shafts of chimneys in various fashions, 
whereof the noblest is the pyramidal. Wotton. 
UNREME'MBERING, adj. Having no memory. 
That unrememb' ring of its former pain, 
The soul may suffer mortal flesh again. Dryden. 
UNREME'MBRANCE, s. Forgetfulness; want of re¬ 
membrance.—Some words are negative in their original lan¬ 
guage, but seem positive, because the negation is unknown; 
as amnesty, an unremernbrance, or general pardon. Watts. 
UNREMITTING, adj. Not relaxing; not abating; per¬ 
severing.—Loos’d be the whirlwind’s unremitting sway. 
Shenstone. 
UNREMO'VABLE, adj. Not to be taken away. 
You know the fiery quality of the duke. 
How unremovable and fixt he is 
In his own course. Shakspeare. 
UNREMO'VABLENESS, s. Impracticability of being 
removed. 
UNR^MO'VABLY, adv. In a manner that admits no 
removal.—His discontents are unremovably coupled to his 
nature. Shakspeare. 
UNREMO'VED, adj. Not taken away.—It is impos¬ 
sible, where this opinion is imbibed and unremoved, to 
found any convincing argument. Hammond. —Not capable 
of being removed.—Like Teneriff or Atlas unremov'd. 
Milton. 
UNRENEWED, adj. Not made anew; not renewed,— 
The corruption of a man’s heart, unrenewed by grace, is 
the cause of its own hardness. South. 
UNREPA'ID, adj. Not recompensed; not compensated. 
Hadst thou full pow’r 
To measure out his torments by thy will; 
Yet what couldst thou, tormentor, hope to gain ? 
Thy loss continues, unrepaid by pain. • Dryden. 
UNREPE’ALED, adj. Not revoked ; not abrogated.— 
When you are pinched with any unrepealed act of parlia¬ 
ment, you declare you will not be obliged by it. Dryden. 
UNREPE'NTANCE, s. State of being unrepentant.— 
The necessity of destruction, consequent upon unrepentance, 
is drawn chiefly from the determination of the Divine Will,, 
which hath so appointed it. Wharton. 
UNREPE'NTED, adj. Not expiated by penitential sor¬ 
row.—They are no fit supplicants to seek his mercy in the 
behalf of others, whose own unrepented sins provoked his 
just indignation. Hooker.- —With what confusion will he 
hear all his unrepented sins produced before men and an¬ 
gels ? Rogers. 
UNREPE'NTING, or Unrepe'ntant, adj. Not re¬ 
penting ; not penitent; not sorrowful for sin. 
Should I of these the liberty regard, 
Who freed, as to their ancient patrimony, 
Unhumbled, unrepentant, unreform’d, 
Headlong would follow. Milton. 
UNREPI'NING, adj. Not peevishly complaining. 
Barefoot as she trod the flinty pavement, 
Her footsteps all along were mark’d with blood ; 
Yet silent on she pass’d, and unrepining. Rowe. 
UNREPI'NINGLY, adv. Without peevish complaint.— 
His indisputable will must be done, and unrepiningly re¬ 
ceived by his own creatures. Wotton. 
UNREPLE'NISHED, adj. Not filled.—Some air re¬ 
treated thither, kept the mercury out of the unreplenished 
space. Boyle. 
UNREPRIE'VABLE, adj. Not to be respited from pe¬ 
nal death. 
Within me is a hell; and there the poison 
Is, as a fiend, confin’d, to tyrannize 
In unreprievable condemned blood. Shakspeare. 
UNREPRIE'VED, adj. Not respited from penal death. 
There 
