U N S 
482 
UNSO'UND, adj. Sickly ; wanting health. 
Intern p’rate youth 
Ends in an age imperfect, and unsound. Denham. 
Not free from cracks.—Rotten ; corrupted.—Not ortho¬ 
dox.—These arguments being sound and and good, it can- 
not be unsound or evil to hold still the same assertion. 
Hooker. —Not honest; not upright. 
Do not tempt my misery. 
Lest it should make me so unsound a man, 
As to upbraid you with those kindnesses 
That I have done for you. 
Not true; not certain; not solid. 
Their vain humours, fed 
With fruitless follies and unsound delights. 
Not fast; not calm. 
The now sad king, 
Toss’d here and there, his quiet to confound. 
Feels sudden terror bring cold shivering; 
Lists not to eat; still muses; sleeps unsound. Daniel. 
Not close; not compact—Some lands make unsound 
cheese, notwithstanding all the care of the good housewife. 
Mortimer. 
Not sincere ; not faithful. 
This Booby clod soon drops upon the ground 
A certain token that his love’s unsound; 
While Lubberkin slicks firmly. Gay. 
Not solid ; not material. 
Of such subtle substance and unsound, 
That like a ghost he seem’d, whose grave-cloaths are unbound. 
Spenser. 
Erroneous; wrong. 
What fury, what conceit unsound, 
Presentelh here to death so sweet a child ? Fairfax. 
Not fast under foot. 
UNSO'UNDED, adj. Not tried by the plummet. 
Glo’ster is 
Unsounded yet, and full of deep deceit. Shakspeare. 
UNSO'UNDNESS, s. Erroneousness of belief; want of 
orthodoxy.—If this be unsound, wherein doth the point of un¬ 
soundness lie ? Hooker. —Corruptness of any kind.—Nei¬ 
ther is it to all men apparent, which complain of unsound 
parts, with what kind of unsoundness every such part is pos¬ 
sessed. Hooker. —Want of strength; want ot solidity.— 
The unsoundness of this principle has been often exposed 
and is universally acknowledged. Addison. 
UNSO'URED, adj. Not made sour.—Meat and drink 
last longer unputrified and unsour'd in winter than in sum¬ 
mer. Bacon. —Not made morose. 
Secure these golden early joys, 
That youth unsour'd with sorrow bears. Dryden. 
UNSO'WN, adj. Not propagated by scattering seed.— 
Mushrooms come up hastily in a night, and yet are unsown. 
Bacon. 
UNSPA'RED, adj. Not spared. 
Whatever thing 
The scithe of time mows down, devour unspared. Milton. 
UNSPA'RING, adj. Not parsimonious. 
She gathers tribute large, and on the board 
Heaps with unsparing hand. Milton. 
Not merciful.—The unsparing sword of justice. Milton. 
To UNSPK'AK, v. a. To retract; to recant. 
I put myself to thy direction, and 
Unspeak mine own detraction ; here abjure 
The taints and blames I laid u p on myself. Shasjmare. 
UNSPE'AKABLE, adj. Not to be expressed; ineffable; 
unutterable. —A thing, which uttered with true devotion 
and zeal of heart, affordeth to God himself that glory, that 
aid to the weakest sort of men, to the most perfect that solid 
comfort, which is unspeakable. Hooker. 
U N S 
UNSPE'AKABLY, adv. Inexpressibly ; ineffably.— 
When nature is in her dissolution, and presents us with no¬ 
thing but bleak and barren prospects, there is something un¬ 
speakably cheerful in a spot of ground which is covered 
with trees, that smile amidst all the rigours of winter. Spec¬ 
tator. 
UNSPE'CIFIED, adj. Not particularly mentioned.— 
Were it not requisite that it should be concealed, it had not 
passed unspecified. Brown. 
UNSPE'C ULATIVE, adj. Not theoretical.—Some mi- 
speculative men may not have the skill to examine their 
assertions. Gov. of the Tongue. 
UNSPE'D, adj. Not dispatched ; not performed. 
Venutus withdraws. 
Unsped the service of the common cause. Garth. 
UNSPE'NT, adj. Not wasted ; not diminished ; not 
weakened; not exhausted.—The sound inclosed within the 
sides of the bell, cometh forth at the holes, unspent and more 
strong. Bacon. 
To UNSPHE'RE, n. a. To remove from its orb. 
You put me off with limber vows; but I, 
Though you wou’d seek t’ unsphere the stars with oaths, 
Should yet say, Sir, no going. Shakspeare. 
UNSPI'ED, adj. Not searched; not explored. 
With narrow search I must walk round 
This garden, and no corner leave unspy'd. Milton. 
Not seen; not discovered. 
Resolv’d to find some fault, before unspy'd. 
And disappointed, if but satisfy’d. Ticket/. 
UNSPI'LT, adj. Not shed. 
That blood which thou and thy great grandsire shed ; 
And all that since these sister nations bled. 
Had been unspilt, had happy Edward known, 
That all the blood he spilt had been his own. Denham. 
Not spoiled; not marred. 
To borrow to-daie, and to-morrow to mis. 
For lender or borrower noiance it is; 
Then have of thine oivne, without lending, unspilt. Tusser. 
To UNSPI'RIT, v. a. To dispirit; to depress; to de¬ 
ject.—Denmark has continued ever since weak and un¬ 
spirited, bent only upon safety. Temple. 
UNSPPRITUAL, adj. Not spiritual; carnal.—These 
divisions, the character of a carnal and unspiritual temper, 
at once weaken and dishonour the protestaut cause. Fuller. 
To UNSPPRITUALIZE, ». a. To deprive of spiri¬ 
tuality.—There are several enjoyments in themselves very 
lawful, and yet such as, upon a free unwary use of them, 
will by degrees certainly indispose and unspiritualize the 
mind. South. 
UNSPO'ILED, adj. Not plundered; not pillaged.—All 
the way that they fled, for very despight, in their return they 
utterly wasted whatsoever they had before left unspoiled. 
Spenser. —Not marred; not hurt; not made useless; not 
corrupted.—Bathurst, yet unspoil'd by wealth. Pope. 
UNSPO'TTED, adj. Not marked with any stain. 
A milk-white hind. 
Without unspotted, innocent within. Dryden. 
Seven bullocks yet unyok’d for Phoebus chuse, 
And for Diana seven unspotted ewes._ Dryden. 
Immaculate; not tainted with guilt. 
Satyran bid him other business ply. 
Than hunt the steps of pure, unspotted maid. Spenser. 
UNSPO'TTEDNESS, s. State of being unspotted or 
not tainted with guilt.—Charity, and unsputtedness, is the 
pure and undefiled religion. Fell ham. 
UNSQUA'RED, adj. Not formed; irregular. 
When he speaks, 
’Tislikea chime a-mending, with terms unsyuar'd: 
Which, from the tongue of roaring Typlion dropt, 
Would seem hvperboles. Shakspeare. 
UNST, 
Shakspeare. 
Spenser. 
