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He joy’d to range abroad in fresh attire, 
Through the wide compass of the airy coast, 
And with unwearied limbs each part t’ enquire. Spenser. 
UNWE'ARIEDLY, adv. Indefatigably.—Absolute per¬ 
fection is, I well know, unattainable ; but I know too, that a 
man of parts may be unweariedly aiming at, and pretty near 
attain it. Ld. Chesterfield. 
UNWE'ARY, adj. [unpepig, Sax.] Not weary. 
To UNWE’ARY, v. a. To refresh after weariness.—My 
business here is to unweary myself, alter my studyes, not to 
drudge. Dryden. 
To UNWE'AVE, v. a. To unfold; to undo what has 
been woven. 
That I should thus umoeave the web of fate. 
Decrease his subjects, and subvert his state. Sandys. 
UNWE'D, adj. Unmarried.—This servitude makes you 
to keep unwed. Shakspeare. 
UNWE'DGEABLE, adj. Not to be cloven. 
Merciful heav’n! 
Thou rather with thy sharp and sulph’rous bolt 
Split’st the unwed scab le and gnarled oak, 
Than the soft myrtle. Shakspeare. 
UNWEE'DED, adj. Not cleared from weeds. 
Fie! ’tis an unweeded garden. 
That grows to seed; things rank, and gross in nature. 
Possess it merely. Shakspeare. 
UNWEE'PED, adj. Not lamented. Now unwept. 
He must not float upon his wat’ry bier 
Unweept, and welter to the parching wind, 
Without the meed of some melodious tear. Milton. 
UNWEET'ING, adj. Ignorant; unknowing. 
Her seeming dead he found with feigned fear. 
As all unweeting of that well she knew; 
And pained himself with busy care to rear 
Her out of careless swoon. Spenser. 
UNWEE'TINGLY, adv. Without knowledge ; igno¬ 
rantly.—As by the way unweetingly I strayed. Spenser. 
UNWE'IGHED, adj. Not examined by the balance.— 
Solomon left all the vessels unweighed, because they were 
exceeding many. 1 Kings. —Not considerate; negligent. 
Daughter, what words have pass’d thy lips unweigh'd. 
Deem not unjustly by my doom opprest, 
Of human race the wisest and the best. Tope. 
UNWE'IGHING, adj. Inconsiderate ; thoughtless.— 
Wise? why, no question but he was—a very superficial, 
ignorant unweighing fellow. Shakspeare. 
UNWE'LCOME, adj. Not pleasing; not grateful; not 
well received. 
Such welcome and unwelcome things at once, 
’Tis hard to reconcile. Shakspeare. 
UNWE'LL, adj. Not well; slightly indisposed ; not in 
perfect health.-—I am neither well nor ill, but unwell. Ld. 
Chesterfield. 
UNWE'PT, adj. Not lamented; not bemoaned. 
Our fatherless distress was left unmoan’d; 
Your widow dolours likewise be unwept. Shakspeare. 
UNWE'T, adj. Not moist. 
Once I meant to meet 
My fate with face unmov’d, and eyes unwet; 
Yet since I have thee here in narrow room. 
My tears shall set thee first afloat within thy tomb. Dryden. 
UNWHI’PT, adj. Not punished ; not corrected with the 
rod. 
Tremble, thou wretch. 
That hast within thee undivulged crimes, 
Unwhipt of justice. Shakspeare. 
UNWHO'LE, adj. This is a Saxon expression, unhsel, 
non sanus ceger, &c. Not sound; sick; infirm. 
UNWHO'LESOME, adj. Insalubrious; mischievous to 
health.—The discovery of the disposition of the air, is good 
for the prognostics of wholesome and unwholesome years. 
Bacon. —Corrupt; tainted.—We’ll use this unwholesome 
humidity; this gross, wat’ry pumpion: we’ll teach him to 
know turtles from jays. Shakspeare. 
UNWHO'LESOMENESS, s. State or quality of being 
unwholesome.—He had made it the metropolis, had the rive°r 
affected him; by whose unwholesomeness he forsook it. Sir 
T. Herbert. 
UNWI'ELDILY, adv. Heavily ; with difficult motion. 
Unwieldily they wallow first in ooze ; 
Then in the shady covert seek repose. Dryden. 
UNWIE'LDINESS, s. Heaviness; difficulty to move, or 
be moved.—The supposed unwieldiness of its massy bulk, 
grounded upon our experience of the inaptitude of great and 
heavy bodies to motion, is a mere imposture of our senses. 
Glanvil/e. 
UNWl’ELDY, adj. Unmanageable; not easily moving 
or moved; bulky; weighty; ponderous.—An ague, meeting 
many humours in a fat, unwieldy body of fifty-eight years 
old, in four or five fits carried him out of the world. Cla¬ 
rendon. 
UNWI'LLING, adj. [unpillenb, Sax.] Loth; not con¬ 
tented ; not inclined; not complying by inclination.—The 
nature of man is unwilling to continue doing that wherein 
it shall always condemn itself. Hooker. 
UNWI'LLINGLY, adv. Not with good-will; not with¬ 
out lothness. 
The whining school-boy with his satchel. 
And shining morning face, creeping like snail 
Unwillingly to school. Shakspeare. 
UNWI'LLINGNESS, s. Lothness; disinclination.— 
Obedience, with professed unwillingness to obey, is no 
better than manifest disobedience. Hooker. 
To UNWI'ND, v. a. pret. and part, passive unwound. 
[unpinban, Sax.] To separate any thing convolved; to un¬ 
twist ; to untwine.—All his subjects having by some years 
learned, so to hope for good and fear harm, only from her, 
that it should have needed a stronger virtue than his, to have 
unwound so deeply an entered vice. Sidney .—To disen¬ 
tangle; to loose from entanglement. 
As you unwind her love from him. 
Lest it should ravel, and be good to none. 
Bottom it on me. Shakspeare. 
To U'NWIND, v. n. To admit evolution.—Put the bot¬ 
toms into clean scalding water, and they will easily unwind. 
Mortimer. 
UNWI'PED, adj. Not cleaned by rubbing. 
Their hands and faces were all badg’d with blood. 
So were their daggers, which unwip'd we found 
Upon their pillows. Shakspeare. 
UNWl'SE, adj. [unpip. Sax.] Weak; defective in wis¬ 
dom.—Be not ta’en tardy by unwise delay. Shakspeare. 
UNWI'SELY, adv. [unptplice, Sax.] Weakly; not pru¬ 
dently ; not wisely. 
Unwisely we the wiser East 
Pity, supposing them oppress’d 
With tyrant’s force. Waller. 
To UNWI'SH, v. a. To wish that which is, not to be._ 
To desire there were no God, were plainly to unwish their 
own being, which must be annihilated in the substraction of 
that essence, which substantially supporteth them. Brown. 
UNWI'SHED, adj. Not sought; not desired. 
To his unwished yoke 
My soul consents not to give sov’reignty. Shakspeare. 
UNWI'ST, adj. Unthought of; not known.—Of hurt 
unwist most danger doth redound. Spenser .—Applied to 
persons; unapprised. Mason. 
He found himselfe unwist so ill bestad. 
That lim he could not wag. Spenser. 
To UN WI'T, v. a. To deprive of understanding. Not 
used. 
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