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481 
Anxur feels the cool refreshing breeze 
Blown off the sea, and all the dewy strand 
Lie 3 cover’d with a smooth, unsinlcing sand. Addison. 
UNSl'NNING, adj. [unj-ynmj, Sax.] Impeccable; 
without sin.—It hath treasures o'f mercy for those who have 
not obeyed the law in the strictness of perfect unsinning 
obedience. Hammond . 
UNSKI'LFUL, adj. Wanting art; wanting knowledge. 
—This overdone, or come tardy off, though it make the 
unskilful laugh, cannot but make the judicious grieve. 
Shakspeare. 
UNSKI'LFULLY, adv. Without knowledge; without 
art.—You speak unskilfully; or, if your knowledge be 
more, it is much darkened in your malice. Shakspeare. 
UNSKI'LFULNESS, s. Want of art; want of know¬ 
ledge.—Let no prices be heightened by the necessity or 
unskilfulness of the contractor. Bp. Taylor. 
UNSKI'LLED, adj. Wanting skill ; wanting know¬ 
ledge : with in before a noun, and to before a verb. 
Poets, like painters, thus unskill'd to trace 
The naked nature, and the living grace. 
With gold and jewels cover every part, 
And hide with ornaments their want of art. Pope. 
* UNSLATN, adj. Not killed.—If there were any who 
felt a pity of so great a fall, and had yet any sparks of 
unslain duty left in them towards me, yet durst they not 
shew it. Sidney. 
UNSLA'KED, adj. Not quenched. 
Her desires new rous’d. 
And yet unslak'd , will kindle in her fancy. 
And make her eager to renew the feast. Dry den. 
UNSLEE'PING, adj. Ever wakeful. 
And roseate dews dispos’d 
All but th’ unsleeping eyes of God to rest. Milton. 
UNSLEE'PY, adj. [unplsepig, Sax., insomnis.'] Not 
sleeping. 
UNSLI'PPING, adj. Not liable to slip; fast. 
To knit your hearts 
With an unslipping knot, take, Antony, 
Octavia to wife. Shakspeare. 
UNSLO'W, adj. [unjdeep, Sax.] Not slow. 
UNSMI'RCHED, adj. Unpolluted ; not stained. 
That drop of blood that’s calm proclaims me bastard ; 
Cries cuckold to my father ; brands the harlot 
Ev’n here, between the chaste and unsmirch'd brow 
Of my true mother. Shakspeare. 
UNSMO'KED, adj. Not smoked. 
His antient pipe in sable dy’d. 
And half unsmok'd lay by his side. Swift. 
UNSMO'OTH, adj. Rough ; not even ; not level. Not 
used. 
Those blossoms, and those dropping gums 
That lie bestrown, unsightly and unsmooth. 
Ask riddance, if we mean to tread with ease. Milton. 
UNSOCIABLE, adj. [insociabilis, Lat.] Not kind; 
not communicative of good ; not suitable to society.—Such 
a behaviour deters men from a religious life, by representing 
it as an unsociable state, that extinguishes all joy. Addison. 
UNSOCIABLY, adv. Not kindly; without good¬ 
nature.—These are pleas’d with nothing that is not unso¬ 
ciably sour, ill-natur’d, and troublesome. L'Estrange. 
UNSOCIAL, adj. Not beneficial to society; hurtful to 
society. Mason. 
Why brand these pleasures with the name 
Of soft unsocial toils. Shenstone. 
UNSO'FT, adj. [unjojxe, Saxon,] Not soft; hard.— 
His beard unsoft. Chaucer. 
UNSO'FT, adv. Not with softness.—Great climbers fall 
unsoft, Spenser. 
UNSO'lLED, adj. Not polluted; not tainted; not 
stained. 
Vol. XXIV. No. 1650. 
Who will believe thee, Isabel ? 
My unsoil'd name, the austereness of my life, 
Will your accusation overweigh. Shakspeare. 
UNSO'LD, adj. Not exchanged for money. 
Mopsus the sage, who future things foretold, 
And t’ other seer, yet by his wife unsold. Dryden. 
UNSO'LDIERED, adj. Wanting the accomplishments 
of a soldier. 
This young prince had the ordering 
(To crown his father’s hopes) of all the army; 
Who (to be short) put all his power to practise. 
Fashion’d and drew them up; but, alas! so poorly, 
So raggedly and loosely, so unsoldier'd. 
The good duke blush’d. Bcauni. and FI. 
UNSO'LDIERLIKE, or Unso'ldierly, adj. Unbe¬ 
coming a soldier.—The general should have turned his eyes 
away from so unso/dierly an action. Rymer. 
UNSOLICITED, adj. Not required; not solicited,— 
Thanks must be voluntary ; not only unconstrained, but un¬ 
solicited ; else they are either trifles or snares. Ld. Halifax. 
UNSO'LID, adj. Fluid ; not coherent.—The extension 
of body is nothing but the cohesion of solid, separable move- 
able parts; and the extension of space, the continuity of 
unsolid, inseparable and unmoveable parts. Locke. 
Having no foundation. 
Ah! whither now are fled 
Those dreams of greatness ! those unsolid hopes 
Of happiness! Thomson. 
UNSO'LVED, adj. Not explicated.—Why may not a 
sincere searcher of truth, by labour and prayer, find out the 
solution of those perplexities, which have hitherto been un¬ 
solved? Watts. 
UNSO'LVIBLE, adj. Not explicable.—If unsolviblc 
otherwise, there is still the more assurance of undeniable de¬ 
monstration. More. 
UNSOO'T, adj. Not sweet. See Soote, and Sweet. 
—Follies—rotten and unsoote. Spenser. 
UNSOPHI'STICATE, or Unsophisticated, adj. 
Not adulterated ; not counterfeit.—The humour andtunicles 
are purely transparent, to let in light and colours, unfouled 
and unsophisticated by any inward tincture. More. 
UNS'ORROWED, adj. Not bewailed ; unlamented.— 
What heaps of grievous transgressions have we committed, 
the best, the perfectest, the most righteous of us all, and yet 
clean pass them over unsorrowed for, and unrepented of! 
Hooker. 
UNSO'RTED, adj. Not distributed by proper sepa¬ 
ration,—Their ideas, ever indifferent and repugnant, lie in 
the brain unsorted, and thrown together without order. 
Watts. —Not suitable. Mason. —The purpose you under¬ 
take is dangerous; the friends you have named uncertain ; 
the time itself unsorted. Shakspeare. 
UNSO’UGHT, adj. Had without seeking. 
Her virtue, and the conscience of her worth, 
That would be woo’d, and not unsought be won. Milton. 
They new hope resume, 
To find whom at the first they found unsought. Milton. 
Thou that art ne’er from velvet slipper free, 
Whence comes this unsought honour unto me ? Fenton. 
Not searched ; not explored. 
Hopeless to find, yet loth to leave unsought, 
Or that, or any place that harbours men. Shakspeare. 
To UNSO'UL, v. a. To divest of mind;. to deprive of 
understanding.—Such debauchedness of life, when it hath 
unsouled the man, buries the beast in excess and riot. 
Hewyt. 
UNSO'ULED, adj. Without soul; without intellectual 
or vital principle. 
Death with most grim and grisly visage seen. 
Yet is he nought but parting of the breath, 
Ne aught to see, but like a shade to ween. 
Unbodied, unsoul'd, unheard, unseen. Spenser. 
5 E UNSO'UND, 
