490 U N W 
That capability and godlike reason. 
To rust in us unus'd. Shakspeare. 
Not accustomed. 
What art thou ? 
Not from above: no, thy wan looks betray 
Diminish’d light, and eyes unus'd to day. Dryden. 
UNU'SEFUL, adj. Useless; serving no purpose.—I was 
persuaded, by experience, that it might not be unuseful in 
the capacities it was intended for. Glanville. 
UNU'SUAL, adj. Not common; not frequent; rare.— 
With this unusual and strange course they went on, till God, 
in whose heaviest worldly judgments I nothing doubt but 
that there may lie hidden mercy, gave them over to their 
own inventions. Hooker. 
UNU'SUALLY, adv. Not in the usual manner. 
UNU'SUALNESS, s. Uncommonness; infrequency.— 
It is the unusualness of the time, not the appearance, that 
surprizes Alcinous. Broome. 
UNUTTERABLE, adj. Ineffable; inexpressible. 
Sighs now breath’d 
Unutterable; which the spirit of prayer 
Inspir’d, and wing’d for heaven with speedier flight 
Than loudest oratory. Milton. 
UNVU'LGAR, adj. Not common. 
Heat my brain 
With Delphic fire 
That I may sing my thoughts in some unvulgar strain. 
B. Jonson. 
UN VULNERABLE, adj. Exempt from wound; not 
vulnerable. 
The god of soldiers inform 
Thy thoughts with nobleness, that thou may’st prove 
To shame unvulnerable, and stick i’ the wars 
Like a great sea-mark, standing every flaw. Shakspeare. 
UNWATTED, adj. Not attended. 
To wander up and down unwaited on. 
And unregarded in my place and project, 
Is for a sowter’s soul, not an old soldier’s. Beaum. and FI. 
UNWA'KENED, adj. Not roused from sleep. 
The more 
His wonder was, to find unwaken'd Eve 
With tresses discompos’d. Milton. 
UNWA'LLED, adj. Having no walls.—He came to 
Tauris, a great and rich city, but unwalled, and of no 
strength. Knol/es. 
UNWA'RES, adv. Unexpectedly; before any caution, 
or expectation. 
She, by her wicked arts, 
Too false and strong for earthly skill or might, 
Unwares me wrought unto her wicked will. Spenser. 
UNWA'RILY, adv. Without caution; carelessly; heed¬ 
lessly. 
The best part of my powers 
Were in the washes all unwarily 
Devour’d by the unexpected flood. Shakspeare. 
UNWA'RINESS, s. Want of caution; carelessness.— 
The same temper which inclines us to a desire of fame, na¬ 
turally betrays us into such slips and unwarinesses as are 
not incident to men of a contrary disposition. Spectator. 
UNWA'RLIKE, adj. Not fit for war; not used to war; 
not military. 
Avert unwarlike Indians from his Rome, 
Triumph abroad, secure our peace at home. Dryden. 
UNWA'RMED, adj. Not excited; not animated.—They 
—heard, unwarm'd, the martial trumpet blow. Addison. 
UNWARNED, adj. [unpapnob, Sax.] Not cautioned; 
not made wary.—Unexperienced young men, if unwarned, 
take one thing for another, and judge by the outside. Locke. 
To UN WARP, v. a , To reduce from the state of being 
U N W 
warped.—When the bark [of the cork-tree] is off, they un¬ 
warp it before the fire, and press it even. Evelyn. 
UNWA'RPED, adj. Not biassed; not turned aside from 
the true direction.—An honest zeal unwarp'd by party-rage. 
Thomson. 
UNWARRANTABLE, adj. Not defensible; not to be 
justified; not allowed.—At very distant removes an extem¬ 
porary intercourse is feasible, and may be compassed with¬ 
out unwarrantable correspondence with the people of the 
air. Glanville. 
UNWARRANTABLENESS, s. State of being unwar¬ 
rantable.—The unwarrantableness is hid and concealed in 
the glory of the success. Abp. Sancroft. 
UNWARRANTABLY, adv. Not justifiably; not de- 
fensibly.—A true and humble sense of your own unworthi¬ 
ness, will not suffer you to rise up to that confidence, which 
some men unwarrantably pretend to, nay unwarrantably 
require of others. Wake. 
UNWARRANTED, adj. Not ascertained; uncertain. 
—The subjects of this kingdom believe it is not legal for 
them to be enforced to go beyond the seas, without their own 
consent, upon hope of an unwarranted conquest; but to 
resist an invading enemy, the subject must be commanded 
out of the counties where they inhabit. Bacon. 
UNWARY, adj. [unpeep, Sax.] Wanting caution; im¬ 
prudent; hasty; precipitate. 
Nor think me so unwary. 
To bring my feet again into the snare 
Where once I have been caught. Milton. 
Unexpected. Obsolete. 
All in the open hall amazed stood. 
At suddenness of that unwary sight, 
And wonder’d at his breathless hasty mood. Spenser. 
UNWA'SHED, or Ujvwa'shen, adj. [unpaepcen, Sax,] 
Not washed; not cleansed by washing. 
Another lean unwash'd artificer 
Cuts off his tale, and talks of Arthur’s death. Shakspeare. 
UNWA'STED, adj. Not consumed; not diminished. 
Why have those rocks so long unwasted stood. 
Since, lavish of their stock, they through the flood 
Have, ages past, their melting crystal spread, 
And with their spoils the liquid regions fed ? Blackmore. 
UNWA'STING, adj. Not growing less; not decaying. 
Purest love’s unwasting treasure; 
Constant faith, fair hope, long leisure; 
Sacred Hymen! these are thine. Pope. 
UNWA'YED, adj , Not used to travel; not seasoned 
in the road.—Beasts, that have been rid off their legs, are as 
much for a man’s use, as colts that are unwayed, and will 
not go at all. Suckling. 
UNWE'AKENED, adj. Not weakened.—By reason of 
the exsuction of some air out of the glass, the elastical power 
of the remaining air was very much debilitated, in compa¬ 
rison qf the unweakened pressure of the external air. Boyle. 
UNWE'APONED, adj. Not furnished with offensive 
arms.—As the beasts are armed with fierce teeth, paws, horns, 
and other bodily instruments of much advantage against un- 
weaponed men; so hath reason taught man to strengthen his 
hand with such offensive arms, as no creature else can well 
avoid. Ralegk. 
UNWE'ARIABLE, adj. Not to be tired; indefatigable. 
—Desire to resemble him in goodness, maketh them unwea- 
T'icif) le Hooker 
UNWE'ARIABLY, adv. So as not to be fatigued.—Let 
us earnestly and unweariably aspire thither. Bp. Hall. 
UNWE'ARIED, adj. Not tired ; not fatigued. 
The Creator from his work 
Desisting, though unwearied, up return’d. Milton. 
Their bloody task unweary'd, still they ply. Waller .— 
Still th’ unweary d sire pursues the tuneful strain. Dryden. — 
Indefatigable; continual; not to be spent; not sinking under 
fatigue. 
He 
