U N S 
484 U N S 
UNSU'BJECT, adj. Not subject; not liable; not ob¬ 
noxious. Unused. 
UNSUBMITTING, adj. Not obsequious; not readily 
yielding; disdaining submission. 
A Hampden too is thine, illustrious land, 
Wise, strenuous, firm, of unsubmitting soul. Thomson. 
UNSUBSTANTIAL, adj. Not solid; not palpable. 
Welcome, thou unsubstantial air that I embrace ; 
The wretch that thou hast blown unto the worst, 
Owes nothing to thy blasts. Shakspeare. 
Not real.—If empty, unsubstantial beings may be ever 
made use of on this occasion, there were never any more 
nicely imagined and employed. Addison. 
UNSUCCEE'DED, adj. Not succeeded. 
Unjust equal o’er equals to let reign; 
One over all, with unsucceeded power. Milton. 
UNSUCCESSFUL, adj. Not having the wished event; 
not fortunate. 
O the sad fate of unsuccessful sin ! 
You see yon heads without, there’s worse within. Cleavcland. 
UNSUCCESSFULLY, adv. Unfortunately; without 
success.—The humble and contented man pleases himself 
innocently; while the ambitious man attempts to please 
others sinfully, and, perhaps, in the issue, unsuccessfully too. 
South. 
UNSUCCESSFULNESS, s. Want of success; event 
contrary to wish.—Admonitions, fraternal or paternal, then 
more public reprehensions, and upon the unsuccessfu/ness 
of all these milder medicaments, the censures of the church. 
Hammond. 
UNSUCCESSIVE, adj. Not proceeding by flux of 
parts.—The unsuccessive duration of God with relation to 
himself, doth not communicate unto other created beings 
the same manner of duration. Hale. 
UNSU'CKF.D, adj. Not having the breasts drawn.— Un- 
suck'd of lamb or kid that tend their play. Milton. 
UNSU'FFERABLE, adj. Not supportable ; intolerable; 
not to be endured. 
UNSUFFI'CIENCE, s. [/’ nsuffisance, Fr.] Inability to 
answer the end proposed.—The error and unsufficience of 
the arguments, doth make it on the contrary side against 
them, a strong presumption that God hath not moved their 
hearts to think such things as he hath not enabled them to 
prove. Hooker. 
UNSUFFl'CIENT, adj. [insuffisant, Fr.] Unable; 
inadequate. 
UNSU'GARED, adj. Not sweetened with sugar.—Try 
it with sugar put into water formerly sugared, and into other 
water unsugared. Bacon. 
UNSUITABLE, adj. Not congruous; not equal; not 
proporlionate.—Virginity, like an old courtier, wears her cap 
out of fashion ; richly suited, but unsuitable, just like the 
brooch and the toothpick, which we wear not now. 
Shakspeare. 
UNSUI'TABLENESS, s. Incongruity ; unfitness.—The 
unsuitableness of one man’s aspect to another man’s fancy 
has raised such an aversion, as has produced a perfect hatred 
of him. South. 
UNSUFTING, adj. Not fitting ; not becoming. 
Whilst you were here, o’erwhelmed with your grief, 
A passion most unsuiting such a man. Shakspeare , 
Leave thy joys, unsuiting such an age. 
To a fresh comer, and resign the stage. Dri/den. 
UNSU'LLIED, adj. Not fouled; not disgraced; pure. 
My maiden honour yet is pure 
As the unsullied lily. Shakspeare. 
UNSUNG, adj. Not celebrated in verse; not recited in 
verse. 
Thus was the first day ev’n and morn. 
Nor pass’d uncelebrated, nor unsung 
By the celestial choirs. Milton. 
UNSUNNED, adj. Not exposed to the sun.—I thought 
her as chaste as unsunn'd snow. Shakspeare. 
UNSUPE'RFLUOUS, adj. Not more than enough. 
Nature’s full blessings would be well dispens’d 
In unsuperfluous, even proportion. Milton. 
UNSUPPLANTED, adj. Not forced or thrown from 
under that which supports it. 
Gladsome they quaff, yet not encroach on night, 
Season of rest; but well bedew’d repair 
Each to his home with unsupplanted feet. Philips _ 
Not defeated by stratagem. 
UNSUPPLI'ABLE, adj. Not to be supplied.—The un- 
suppliable defect of any necessary antecedent must needs 
cause a nullity of all those consequences which depend upon 
it. Chill/hg’worth. 
UNSUPPLFED, adj. Not supplied ; not accommodated 
with something necessary. 
Prodigal in every other grant. 
Her sire left unsupply'd her only want. Drydeir. 
UNSUPPO'RTABLE, adj. [insupportable , Fr.] Into¬ 
lerable; such as cannot be endured.—.The uneasiness of un¬ 
relieved thirst, by continuance grows the more unsup- 
portable. Boyle. 
UNSUPPO'RT ABLENESS, i. State of being unsup- 
portable.—The unsupportablencss of this many times doth 
cause men in the bitterness of their souls to chuse strangling 
and death rather than life. Wilkins. 
UNSUPPO'RTABLY, ado. Intolerably.—For a man to 
do a thing, while his conscience assures him that he shall be 
infinitely, unsupportab/y miserable, is certainly unnatural. 
South. 
UNSUPPORTED, adj. Not sustained ; not held up. 
Them she up-stays 
Gently with myrtle-band, mindless the while 
Herself, though fairest, unsupported flower. Milton . 
Not assisted.—Nor have our solitary attempts been so dis¬ 
couraged, as to despair of the favourable look of learning 
upon our single and unsupported endeavours. Brown. 
UNSUPPRE'SSED, adj. Not suppressed ; not kept 
under; not extinguished.—Driven away by unsuppressed 
tumults. King Charles. 
UNSU'RE, adj. Not fixed ; not certain. 
What is love ? ’tis not hereafter: 
Present mirth hath present laughter; 
What’s to come is still unsure. Shakspeare. 
UNSURMO'UNTABLE, adj. [insurmountable, Fr.} 
insuperable; not to be overcome. 
UNSUSCEPTIBLE, adj. Incapable; not liable to admit. 
She a goddess died in grain. 
Was unsusceptible of stain. Swifl. 
UNSUSPE'CT, or Unsuspe'cted, adj. Not considered 
as likely to do or mean ill. 
Here is the head of that ignoble traitor, 
The dangerous and unsuspected Hastings. Shakspeare. 
Author unsuspect, 
Friendly to man, far from deceit or guile. Milton. 
UNSUSPE'CTING, adj. Not imagining that any ill is. 
designed. 
When Albion sends her eager sons to war. 
Pleas’d, in the general’s sight, the host lie down 
Sudden, before some unsuspecting town ; 
The captive race, one instant makes our prize. 
And high in air Britannia’s standard flies. Pope, 
UNSUSPI'CIOUS, adj. Having no suspicion. 
He his guide requested to let him lean 
With both his arms on those two massy pillars. 
That to the arched roof gave main support. 
He unsuspicious led him. Milton^ 
UNSUSTAINABLE, adj. Not to be sustained.—The 
weapon of the slanderer is an envenomed arrow, full of 
deadly poison, which by no force can be resisted, by no art 
declined; 
