U N S 
U N S 
477 
■whom she was committed, fainted in their labour, or for¬ 
sook their charge. Spenser. 
UNRU'LINESS, s. Turbulence; tumultuousness; licen¬ 
tiousness.—No care was had to curb the unruliness of. anger, 
or the exorbitance of desire. Amongst all their sacrifices 
they never sacrificed so much as one lust. South. 
UNRU'LY, adj. Turbulent; ungovernable; licentious; 
tumultuous. 
In sacred bands of wedlock ty’d 
To Theron, a loose unruly swain; 
Who had more joy to range the forest wide. 
And chace the savage beast with busy pain. Spenser. 
To UNRU'MPLE, v. a. To free from rumples; to open 
out. 
Daffodils, late from earth’s slow womb 
Unrumple their swoll’n buds, and show their yellow bloom. 
Addison. 
To UNSA'DDEN, v. a. To relieve from sadness.—Mu¬ 
sic unsaddens the melancholy, quickens the dull, awaketh 
the drowsy. Whitlock. 
To UNSADDLE, v. a. To take off the saddle from a 
horse.—Before we could alight from and unsaddle our horses, 
and unpack our things, our house was entirely finished. 
Transl. of Thunberg's Trav. 
UNSA'DDLED, adj. [unjepabelab, Sax.] Not having 
the saddle on. 
UNSA'FE, adj. Not secure; hazardous; dangerous.— 
If they would not be drawn to seem his adversaries, yet others 
should be taught how unsafe it was to continue his friends. 
Hooker. 
UNSA'FELY, adv. Not securely; dangerously.—As no 
man can walk, so neither can he think, uneasily or un¬ 
safely ; but in using, as his legs, so his thoughts amiss, 
which a virtuous man never doth. Grew. 
UNSAI'D, adj. [unpaeb, Sax.] Not uttered; not 
mentioned. — Chanticleer shall wish his words unsaid. 
Dry den. 
UNSA'ILABLE, adj. Not navigable. 
He finds 
The sea unsailable for dangerous winds. May. 
To UNSA'INT, v. a. To deprive of saintship.—The 
Jews, like the men here of late, for ever unsainting all the 
world besides themselves. South. 
UNSA'LEABLE, adj. Not vendible; unmerchantable. 
UNSA'LTED, adj. Not pickled or seasoned with salt.— 
The muriatic scurvy, induced by too great quantity of sea- 
salt, and common among mariners, is cured by a diet of 
fresh unsalted things, and watery liquor acidulated. Ar- 
buthnot. 
UNSALU'TED, adj. [insalutatus , Lat.] Not saluted. 
Gods! I prate ; 
And the most noble mother in the world 
Leave unsaluted. Shakspeare. 
UNSA'NCTIFIED, adj. Unholy; not consecrated; not 
pious. 
UNSANG, CAPE, a cape on the east coast of the island 
of Borneo. Long. 119.21. E. Lat. 5.18. N. 
UNSA'TED, adj. Not satisfied; insatiate. 
Alas, that he amid the race of men, 
That he, who thinks of purest gold with scorn, 
Should with unsated appetite demand. 
And vainly court, the pleasure it procures! Shenstone. 
UNSA'TIABLE, 'adj. [ insatiabilis , Latin.] Not to be 
satisfied; greedy without bounds.—■ Unsatiable in their 
longing to do all manner of good to all the creatures of God, 
but especially men. Hooker. 
. UNSA'TIATE, adj. Not satisfied. 
Self-love, vain-glory, strife, and fell debate. 
Unsatiate covetise. More. 
UNSATISFA'CTORINESS, s. Failure of giving satis¬ 
faction.-—That which most deters me from such trials, is 
their unsatisfactoriness, though they should succeed. Boyle. 
Von. XXIV. No. 1650. 
UNSATISFACTORY, adj. Not giving satisfaction,— 
Not clearing the difficulty.—That speech of Adam, The wo¬ 
man thou gavest me to be with me, she gave me of the tree, 
and I did eat, is an unsatisfactory reply, and therein was 
involved a very impious error. Brown. 
UNSATISFIED, adj. Not contented; not pleased.— 
Flashy wits, who cannot fathom a large discourse, must be 
very much unsatisfied of me. Digby. —Not settled in 
opinion.—Concerning the analytical preparation of gold, 
they leave persons unsatisfied. Boyle. —Not filled; not 
gratified to the full. 
Though he were unsatisfied in getting, 
Yet in bestowing he was most princely. Shakspeare. 
UNSATISFIEDNESS, s. The state of being not satisfied- 
—-Between my own unsatisfiedness in conscience, and a 
necessity of satisfying the importunities of some, I was per¬ 
suaded to chuse rather what was safe, than what seemed 
just. King Charles. 
UNSATISFYING, adj. Unable to gratify to the full.— 
Nor is fame only unsatisfying in itself, but the desire of it 
lays us open to many accidental troubles. Addison. 
UNSA'TISFYINGNESS, Incapability of gratifying 
to the full.—They understand the variety and the unsatisfy¬ 
ingness of the things of this world. Bp. Taylor. 
UNSAVOURILY, adv. So as to displease or disgust. 
—So often and so unsavourily has it been repeated, that 
the reader may well cry, Down with it, down with it, for 
shame! Milton. 
UNSA'VOURINESS, s. Bad taste.—Bad smell.— 
If we concede a national unsavouriness in any people, 
yet shall we find the Jews less subject hereto than any. 
Brown. 
UNSAVOURY, adj. Tasteless.—Can that which is un¬ 
savoury be eaten without salt? or is there any taste in the 
white of an egg ? Job. —Having a bad taste. 
Unsavoury food, perhaps. 
To spiritual natures. Milton. 
Having an ill smell; fetid.—Some may emit an unsa¬ 
voury odour, which may happen from the quality of what 
they have taken. Brown. —Unpleasing; disgusting.—■ 
Things of so mean regard, although necessary to be ordered, 
are notwithstanding very unsavoury , when they come to 
be disputed of, because disputation pre-supposeth some 
difficulty in the matter. Hooker.-—Unsavoury news : but 
how made he escape ? Shakspeare. 
To UNSA'Y, v. a. To retract; to recant; to deny what 
has been said. 
Call you me fair ? that fair again unsay; 
Demetrius loves you, fair. Shakspeare. 
Say and unsay, feign, flatter, or abjure. Milton. 
How soon 
Would height recall high thoughts, how soon unsay 
What feign’d submission swore! Milton. 
To say, and strait unsay, pretending first 
To fly pain, professing next the spy. 
Argues no leader, but a liar trac’d. Milton. 
There is nothing said there, which you may have occa¬ 
sion to unsay hereafter. Atterbury. 
UNSCA'LY, adj. Having no scales.—The jointed lob¬ 
ster, and unsca/y soal. Gay. 
UNSCA'NNED, adj. Not measured; not computed. 
This tiger-footed rage, when it shall find 
The harm of unscann'd swiftness, will, too late. 
Tie leaden pounds to his heels. Shakspeare. 
UNSCA'RED, adj. Not frightened away. 
Then sleep was undisturb’d by care, unscar'd 
By drunken howlings. Cowper. 
UNSCA'RRED, adj. Not marked with wounds. 
And must she die for this? O let her live; 
So shemay live unscarr'd from bleeding slaughter, 
I will confess she was not Edward’s daughter. Shakspeare. 
5 D UNSCATTERED, 
