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There to converse with everlasting groans, 
Unrespited, unpitied, unreprieved. Milton. 
UNREPRO'ACHED, adj. Not upbraided; not cen¬ 
sured.—Sir John Hotham, unreproached, uncursed by any 
imprecation of mine, pays his head. King Charles. 
UNREPRO'VABLE, adj. Not liable to blame.—You 
hath he reconciled, to present you holy, unblameable, and 
unreprovable in his sight. Col. 
UNREPRO'VED, adj. Not censured.—Christians have 
their churches, and unreproved exercise of religion. Sandys. 
—Not liable to censure. » 
The antique world, in his first flowering youth, 
With gladsome thanks, and unreproved truth. 
The gifts of sovereign bounty did embrace. Spenser. 
UNREPU'GNANT, adj. Not opposite.—When Scrip¬ 
ture doth yield us natural laws, what particular order is there¬ 
unto most agreeable; when positive, which way to make 
laws repugnant unto them. Hooker. 
UNREFUTABLE, adj. Not creditable.'—When we see 
wise men examples of duty, we are convinced that piety is 
no unreputable qualification, and that we are not to be 
ashamed of our virtue. Rogers. 
UNREQUE'STED, adj. Not asked.—With what secu¬ 
rity can our ambassadors go, unrequested of the Turkish 
emperor, without his safe conduct? Knolles. 
UNREQUITABLE, adj. Not to be retaliated.—Some 
will have it that all mediocrity of folly is foolish, and be¬ 
cause an unrequitable evil may ensue, an indifferent conve¬ 
nience must be omitted. Brown. 
UNRESE'NTED, adj. Not regarded with anger.—The 
failings of these holy persons passed not unresented by God; 
and the same scripture which informs us of the sin, records 
the punishment. Rogers. 
UNRESE'RVE, s. Absence of reserve; frankness; open¬ 
ness.—With these he [Dr. Bathurst] lived in the freedom of 
social unreserve, tempering the rigour of an authoritative 
character with the affability of a companion, and the graces 
of an agreeable conversation. Warton. 
UNRESE'RVED, adj. Not limited by any private con¬ 
venience.—The piety our heavenly Father will accept, must 
consist in an entire, unreserved obedience to his commands; 
since whosoever offends in one precept, is guilty of the whole 
law. Rogers. —Open; frank; concealing nothing. 
UNRESE'RVEDLY, adv. Without limitations.—I am 
not to embrace absolutely and unreservedly the opinion of 
Aristotle. Boyle. —Without concealment; openly.—I know 
your friendship to me is extensive; and it is what I owe to 
that friendship, to open my mind unreservedly to you. 
Pope. 
UNRESE'RVEDNESS, s. Unlimitedness; largeness.— 
The tenderness and unreservedness of his love, made him 
think those his friends or enemies, that were so to God. 
Boyle. —Openness; frankness.—The freedom and unreserv- 
edness, with which Boileau and Racine communicated their 
works to each other, is hardly to be paralleled. Dr. Warton. 
UNRESPSTED, adj. Not opposed.—The aetherial spaces 
are perfectly fluid; they neither assist, nor retard, the pla¬ 
nets, which roll through as free and unresisted as if they 
moved in a vacuum. Bentley. —Resistless; such as cannot 
be opposed. 
Those gods! whose unresisted might 
Have sent me to these regions void of light. Dryden. 
UNRESI'STIBLE, adj. Not to be resisted.-—Such a de¬ 
struction as should, like a flood, overwhelm the whole na¬ 
tion ; and, as an unresistible torrent, break down and wash 
all away before it. Mede. 
UNRESl'STING, adj. Not opposing; not making re¬ 
sistance. 
The sheep was sacrific’d on no pretence, 
But meek and unresisting innocence: 
A patient useful creature. Dryden. 
UNRESO'LVABLE, adj. Not to be solved; insoluble. 
—For a man to run headlong, while his ruin stares him in 
the face; still to press on to the embraces of sin, is a prob- 
U N R 475 
lem unresolvable upon any other ground, but that sin infa¬ 
tuates before it destroys. South. 
UNRESO'LVED, adj. Not determined; having made 
no resolution: sometimes with of. 
Turnus unresolv'd off\ ight. 
Moves tardy back, and just recedes from fight. Dryden. 
Not solved; not cleared.—I do not so magnify this me¬ 
thod, to think it will perfectly clear every hard place, and 
leave no doubt unresolved. Locke. 
UNRESO'LVING, adj. Not resolving; not determined.— 
She her arms about her unresolving husband threw. Dryden. 
UNRESPE'CTABLE, adj. Not entitled to respect. Ma¬ 
lone. 
UNRESPE'CTED, adj. Not regarded.—They live un¬ 
woo’d, and unrespected fade. Shakspeare. 
UNRESPE'CTIVE, adj. Inattentive; taking little notice. 
I will converse with iron-witted fools. 
And unrespective boys ; none are for me 
That look into me with considerate eyes. Shakspeare. 
Mean ; despicable. Malone. 
Nor the remainder viands 
We do not throw in unrespective sieve, 
Because we now are full. Shakspeare. 
UNRE'SPITED, adj. Admitting no respite, pause, or 
intermission. 
There to converse with everlasting groans. 
Unrespited, unpitied, unrepriev’d. 
Ages of hopeless end. Milton. 
UNRE'ST, s. [onraste, Teut.] Disquiet; want of 
tranquillity ; unquietness.—Of thouht cometh the wakyngys 
and unrest is. Ld. Rivers. 
Wise behest, those creeping flames by reason to subdue, 
Before their rage grew to so great unrest. Spenser. 
UNREST, an island in the Eastern seas, near the coast of 
Java ; 9 miles west of Batavia. 
UNRESTO'RED, adj. Not restored. 
Then countries stol’n, and captives unrestor'd, 
Give strength to every blow, and edge his sword. Addison. 
Not cleared from an attainder.—The son of an unrestored 
traitor has no pretences to the quality of his ancestors. 
Collier. Not cured.—If unrestor'd by this, despair of 
cure. Young. 
UNRESTRAINED, adj. Not confined ; not hindered. 
My tender age, in luxury was train’d. 
With idle ease, and pageants entertain’d, 
My hours my own, my pleasures unrestrain'd. Dryden. 
Licentious; loose. 
The taverns he daily doth frequent, 
With unrestrained, loose companions. Shakspeare. 
Not limited.—Were there in this aphorism an unre¬ 
strained truth, yet were it not reasonable to infer from a 
caution, a non-usance, or abolition. Brown. 
UNRETRA'CTED, adj. Not revoked ; not recalled.— 
The penitence of the criminal may have numbered him 
amongst the Saints, when our tinretracted uncharitableness 
may send us to unquenchable flames. Gov. of the Tongue. 
UNREVE'ALED, adj. Not told ; not discovered. 
Had ye once seen these her celestial treasures. 
And unrevealed pleasures. 
Then would ye wonder, and her praises sing. Spenser. 
UNREVE'NGED, adj. Not revenged. 
So might we die, not envying them that live; 
So would we die, not unrevenged all. Fairfax. 
UNRE'VEREND, or Unre'verent, adj. Irreverent; 
disrespectful.—See not your bride in these unreverend robes. 
Shakspeare. 
UNRE'VERENTLY, adv. Disrespectfully. 
I did unreverently blame the gods, 
Who wake for thee, though thou snore for thyself. 
B. Jonson. 
UNREVE'RSED, 
