U N S 
478 U N S 
UNSCATTERED, adj. Not dispersed; not thrown 
into confusion.—At that time no little murmur, and sedition, 
■was moved in the host of the Greeks; which notwith¬ 
standing was wonderfully pacified, and the army unscat¬ 
tered, by the majesty of Agamemnon joining to him coun¬ 
sellors Nestor and the witty Ulysses. Sir T. Elyot. 
UNSCHENK, a large village in the central part of Euro¬ 
pean Russia, in the government of Tamboy. 
UNSCHOLA'STIC, adj. Not bred to literature.—Not¬ 
withstanding these learned disputants, it was to the unscho- 
lastick statesman, that the world owed their peace and 
liberties. Locke. 
UNSCHO'OLED, adj. Uneducated; not learned.— 
When the apostles were ordained to alter the laws of hea¬ 
thenish religion, they were, St. Paul excepted, unschooled 
and unlettered men. Hooker. 
UNSCO'RCHED, aclj. Not touched by fire. 
His hand. 
Not sensible of fire, remain’d unscorch'd. Shakspeare. 
UNSCO'URED, adj. Not cleaned by rubbing. 
Th’ enrolled penalties. 
Which have, like unscour'd armour, hung by th’ wall, 
And none of them been worn. Shakspeare. 
UNSCRATCHED, adj. Not torn. 
I with much expedient march 
Have brought a counter-check before your gates. 
To save unscratch'd your city’s threaten’d cheeks. 
Shakspeare. 
UNSCRE'ENED, adj. Not covered; not protected.— 
Those balls of burnished’brass, the tops of churches are ador¬ 
ned with, derive their glittering brightness from their being 
exposed, unscreened, to the sun’s refulgent beams. Hoyle. 
To UNSCRE'W, v. a. To loosen; to unfasten by 
screwing back.—Upon his refusing to take the oath, they 
put his thumbs in the screws, and drew them so hard, that, 
as they put him to extreme torture, so they could not un¬ 
screw them again. Burnet. 
UNSCRI'PTURAL, adj. Not defensible by Scripture. 
—The doctrine delivered in my sermon was neither new nor 
unscriptural, nor in itself false. Atterbury 
To UNSE'AL, v. a. [unpselan, Sax.; solvere.'] To open 
any thing sealed. 
I must unseal 
Another mystery. Beaum. and FI. 
This new glare of light, 
Cast sudden on his face, unseal'd his sight. Dry den. 
UNSE'ALED, adj. Wanting a seal. 
Your oaths 
Are words, and poor conditions but unseal'd. Shakspeare. 
Having the seal broken. 
To UNSE'AM, v. a. To rip; to cut open. 
He ne’er shook hands, nor bid farewell to him. 
Till he unseam'd him from the nape to th’ chops, 
And fix’d his head upon our battlements. Shakspeare. 
UNSEARCHABLE, adj. Inscrutable; not to be ex¬ 
plored. 
All is best, though we oft doubt 
What the unsearchable dispose 
Of highest wisdom brings about, 
And ever best found in the close. Milton. 
UNSE'ARCHABLENESS, s. Impossibility to be ex¬ 
plored.—The unsearchableness of God’s ways should be a 
bridle to restrain presumption, and not a sanctuary for spi¬ 
rits of error. Bramhall. 
UNSE'ARCHED, adj. Not explored ; notexamined.— 
Since you have your tricks, and your conveyances, we will 
not leave a wrinkle of you unsearch'd. Beaum. and FI .— 
Search through this garden; leave unsearch'd no nook. 
Milton. ~ 
UNSEASONABLE, adj. Not suitable to time or occa- 
sion; unfit; untimely; ill-timed.—Zeal, unless it be rightly 
guided, when it endeavours the most busily to please God, 
forceth upon him those unseasonable offices which please 
him not. Hooker. —Not agreeable to the time of the year. 
Like an unseasonable stormy day. 
Which makes the silver rivers drown their shores. 
As if the world were all dissolv’d in tears. Shakspeare. 
Late ; as, unseasonable time of night. 
UNSE'ASONABLENESS, s. Disagreement with time or 
place.—The moral goodness, unfitness, and unseasonable¬ 
ness of moral or natural actions, falls not within the verge 
of a brutal faculty. Hale. 
UNSEASONABLY, adv. Not seasonably; not agree¬ 
ably to time or occasion.—Some things it asketh unseason¬ 
ably, when they need not to be prayed for, as deliverance 
from thunder and tempest, when no danger is nigh. Hooker. 
UNSEASONED, adj. Unseasonable; untimely; ill- 
timed. Out of use. 
Your majesty hath been this fortnight ill. 
And these unseason'd hours perforce must add 
Unlo your sickness. Shakspeare. 
Unformed; not qualified by use.—’Tis an unseason'd 
courtier; advise him. Shakspeare. —Irregular; inordinate. 
—The commissioners pulled down or defaced all images in 
churches, in such unseasonable and unseasoned fashion, as 
if done in hostility. Hayward. —Not kept till fit for use. 
Not salted; as, unseasoned meat. 
To UNSEAT, v. a. To throw from the seat. 
At once the shock unseated him; he flew 
Sheer o’er the shaggy barrier. Cowper. 
UNSE'CONDED, adj. Not supported. 
Him did you leave 
Second to none, unseconded by you. 
To look upon the hideous god of war 
In disadvantage. Shakspeare. 
Not exemplified a second time.—Strange and unseconded 
shapes of worms succeeded. Brown. 
To UNSE'CRET, v. a. To disclose; to divulge.— 
He that consulteth what he should do, should not declare 
what he will do; but let princes beware, that the unsecreting 
of their affairs comes not from themselves. Bacon. 
UNSE'CRET, adj. Not close; not trusty. 
Who shall be true to us, 
When we are so unsecret to ourselves ? Shakspeare. 
UNSECU'RE, adj. Not safe. 
Love, though most sure, 
Yet always to itself seems unsecure. Denham. 
UNSEDU'CED, adj. Not drawn to ill. 
Among innumerable false, unmov’d, 
Unshaken, unseduc'd, unterrify’d. Milton. 
UNSEEING, adj. Wanting the power of vision. 
I should have scratch’d out your unseeing eyes. 
To make my master out of love with thee. Shakspeare. 
To UNSEE'M, v. n. Not to seem. Not in use. 
You wrong the reputation of your name, 
In so unseeming to confess receipt 
Of that which hath so faithfully been paid. Shakspeare. 
UNSEE'MLINESS, s. Indecency; indecorum; un¬ 
comeliness.—All as before his sight whom we fear, and 
whose presence to offend with any the least unseemliness, 
we would be surely as loth as they, who most reprehend or 
deride that w'e do. Hooker. 
UNSEE'MLY, adj. Indecent; uncomely; unbecoming. 
—Adultery of the tongue, consisting in corrupt, dishonest, 
and unseemly speeches. Perkins. 
UNSEE'MLY, adv. Indecently; unbecomingly.—Cha¬ 
rity doth not behave itself unseemly, seeketh not her own. 
1 Cor. 
UNSEE’N, adj. Not seen; not discovered. 
A jest unseen, inscrutable, invisible, 
As a nose on a man’s face, or a weathercock on a steeple. 
Shakspeare. 
Invisible; 
