- unquiet
- unravel
- unready
- unreave
- unreeve
- unresty
- unright
- unrivet
- unroost
- unruled
- unsaint
- unscale
- unscrew
- unseven
- unsexed
- unshale
- unshape
- unshell
- unshent
- unshout
- unsight
- unsilly
- unsinew
- unskill
- unsling
- unsonsy
- unsound
- unspeak
- unspell
- unspike
- unspilt
- unstack
- unstate
- unsteel
- unstick
- unstill
- unsting
- unstock
- unswear
- unsweat
- unswell
- untaste
- unteach
- unthank
- unthink
- untooth
- untread
- untruss
- untrust
- untruth
- untwine
- untwirl
- untwist
- unusage
- unusual
- unvicar
- unwares
- unwayed
- unweary
- unweave
- unwhole
- unwitch
- unwoman
- unworth
- unwrite
- unyoked
- unzoned
- upbraid
- upbreak
- upbreed
- upburst
- upcheer
- upclimb
- upeygan
- upflung
- upheave
- uphoard
- uppluck
- upraise
- upright
- uprouse
- upshoot
- upspear
- upstand
- upstare
- upstart
- upswarm
- upswell
- upthrow
- uptrace
- uptrain
- upwards
- upwhirl
- urachus
- uraemia
- uraemic
- uralite
- uranate
- uranite
- uranium
- uranous
- urceole
- urceoli
- urethra
- urgence
- urgency
- urinary
- urinate
- urinose
- urinous
- urnfuls
- urocele
- urocyst
- urodele
- urohyal
- urology
- uromere
- urosome
- urostea
- urtical
- useless
- ushered
- usurped
- usurper
- utensil
- uterine
- utility
- utilize
- utopist
- utricle
- uttered
- utterer
- utterly
- uxorial
- undecyl
- undeify
- underdo
- undergo
- undevil
- undight
- undigne
- undoing
- undrape
- undress
- undwelt
- undying
- uneared
- unearth
- unendly
- unequal
- unexact
- unfaith
- unfeaty
- unfence
- unfiled
- unflesh
- unframe
- unfrock
- unfumed
- unglaze
- unglove
- ungodly
- ungored
- ungrave
- unguard
- ungueal
- unguent
- ungulae
- ungular
- unguled
- unhandy
- unhappy
- unheard
- unheart
- unheedy
- unhinge
- unhitch
- unhoard
- unhoped
- unhorse
- unhosed
- unhouse
- unhuman
- uniaxal
- unicity
- unicorn
- unideal
- unifier
- uniform
- unified
- unipara
- unitary
- uniting
- unition
- unitive
- unitize
- unitude
- unities
- unjoint
- unkempt
- unknown
- unlatch
- unlaugh
- unlawed
- unlearn
- unleash
- unliken
- unlived
- unlodge
- unloose
- unlucky
- unmarry
- unmeant
- unmiter
- unmitre
- unmould
- unmoral
- unmoved
- unnerve
- unnethe
- unnoble
- unnobly
- unoften
- unorder
- unowned
- unpaint
- unpaved
- unpeace
- unplaid
- unpleat
- unplumb
- unplume
- unpower
- unqueen
- unquick
- unalist
- unarmed
- unarted
- unaware
- unbeget
- unbegot
- unbegun
- unbeing
- unbound
- unbless
- unblest
- unblind
- unbosom
- unbound
- unbowed
- unbowel
- unbrace
- unbraid
- unbuild
- unbuxom
- uncanny
- unchain
- uncharm
- unchild
- uncinus
- uncivil
- unclasp
- unclean
- uncling
- uncloak
- unclose
- uncloud
- uncoach
- uncouth
- uncover
- uncrown
- unction
- uncurse
- undated
- umbilic
- umbones
- umbrere
- umbrine
- umbrose
- umpired
- ululant
- ululate
- umbilic
- umbrage
- umbrate
- uberous
- udalman
- uddered
- ulcered
- ulexite
- ulnaria
(v. t.) To disquiet.
(a.) Not quiet; restless; uneasy; agitated; disturbed.
(v. t.) To disentangle; to disengage or separate the threads
of; as, to unravel a stocking.
(v. t.) Hence, to clear from complication or difficulty; to
unfold; to solve; as, to unravel a plot.
(v. t.) To separate the connected or united parts of; to throw
into disorder; to confuse.
(v. i.) To become unraveled, in any sense.
(a.) Not ready or prepared; not prompt; slow; awkward; clumsy.
(a.) Not dressed; undressed.
(v. t.) To undress.
(v. t.) To unwind; to disentangle; to loose.
(v. t.) To withdraw, or take out, as a rope from a block,
thimble, or the like.
(a.) Causing unrest; disquieting; as, unresty sorrows.
(a.) Not right; wrong.
(n.) A wrong.
(v. t.) To cause (something right) to become wrong.
(v. t.) To take out, or loose, the rivets of; as, to unrivet
boiler plates.
(v. t.) To drive from the roost.
(a.) Not governed or controlled.
(a.) Not ruled or marked with lines; as, unruled paper.
(v. t.) To deprive of saintship; to deny sanctity to.
(v. t.) To divest of scales; to remove scales from.
(v. t.) To draw the screws from; to loose from screws; to
loosen or withdraw (anything, as a screw) by turning it.
(v. t.) To render other than seven; to make to be no longer
seven.
(imp. & p. p.) of Unsex
(v. t.) To strip the shale, or husk, from; to uncover.
(v. t.) To deprive of shape, or of proper shape; to disorder;
to confound; to derange.
(v. t.) To strip the shell from; to take out of the shell; to
hatch.
(a.) Not shent; not disgraced; blameless.
(v. t.) To recall what is done by shouting.
(a.) Doing or done without sight; not seeing or examining.
(a.) See Unsely.
(v. t.) To deprive of sinews or of strength.
(n.) Want of skill; ignorance; unskillfulness.
(v. t.) To take off the slings of, as a yard, a cask, or the
like; to release from the slings.
(a.) Not soncy (sonsy); not fortunate.
(a.) Not sound; not whole; not solid; defective; infirm;
diseased.
(v. t.) To retract, as what has been spoken; to recant; to
unsay.
(v. t.) To break the power of (a spell); to release (a person)
from the influence of a spell; to disenchant.
(v. t.) To remove a spike from, as from the vent of a cannon.
(a.) Not spilt or wasted; not shed.
(v. t.) To remove, or take away, from a stack; to remove, as
something constituting a stack.
(v. t.) To deprive of state or dignity.
(v. t.) To disarm; to soften.
(v. t.) To release, as one thing stuck to another.
(a.) Not still; restless.
(v. t.) To disarm of a sting; to remove the sting of.
(v. t.) To deprive of a stock; to remove the stock from; to
loose from that which fixes, or holds fast.
(v. t.) To remove from the stocks, as a ship.
(v. t.) To recant or recall, as an oath; to recall after having
sworn; to abjure.
(v. i.) To recall an oath.
(v. t.) To relieve from perspiration; to ease or cool after
exercise or toil.
(v. t.) To sink from a swollen state; to subside.
(v. t.) To deprive of a taste for a thing.
(v. t.) To cause to forget, or to lose from memory, or to
disbelieve what has been taught.
(v. t.) To cause to be forgotten; as, to unteach what has been
learned.
(n.) No thanks; ill will; misfortune.
(v. t.) To recall or take back, as something thought.
(v. t.) To take out the teeth of.
(v. t.) To tread back; to retrace.
(v. t.) To loose from a truss, or as from a truss; to untie or
unfasten; to let out; to undress.
(n.) Alt. of Untrusser
(n.) Distrust.
(n.) The quality of being untrue; contrariety to truth; want of
veracity; also, treachery; faithlessness; disloyalty.
(n.) That which is untrue; a false assertion; a falsehood; a
lie; also, an act of treachery or disloyalty.
(v. t.) To untwist; to separate, as that which is twined or
twisted; to disentangle; to untie.
(v. i.) To become untwined.
(v. t.) To untwist; to undo.
(v. t.) To separate and open, as twisted threads; to turn back,
as that which is twisted; to untwine.
(v. t.) To untie; to open; to disentangle.
(n.) Want or lack of usage.
(a.) Not usual; uncommon; rare; as, an unusual season; a person
of unusual grace or erudition.
(v. t.) To deprive of the position or office a vicar.
(adv.) Unawares; unexpectedly; -- sometimes preceded by at.
(a.) Not used to travel; as, colts that are unwayed.
(a.) Having no ways or roads; pathless.
(v. t.) To cause to cease being weary; to refresh.
(v. t.) To unfold; to undo; to ravel, as what has been woven.
(a.) Not whole; unsound.
(v. t.) To free from a witch or witches; to fee from
witchcraft.
(v. t.) To deprive of the qualities of a woman; to unsex.
(a.) Unworthy.
(n.) Unworthiness.
(v. t.) To cancel, as what is written; to erase.
(a.) Not yet yoked; not having worn the yoke.
(a.) Freed or loosed from a yoke.
(a.) Licentious; unrestrained.
(a.) Not zoned; not bound with a girdle; as, an unzoned bosom.
(v. t.) To charge with something wrong or disgraceful; to
reproach; to cast something in the teeth of; -- followed by with or
for, and formerly of, before the thing imputed.
(v. t.) To reprove severely; to rebuke; to chide.
(v. t.) To treat with contempt.
(v. t.) To object or urge as a matter of reproach; to cast up;
-- with to before the person.
(v. i.) To utter upbraidings.
(n.) The act of reproaching; contumely.
(v. i.) To break upwards; to force away or passage to the
surface.
(n.) A breaking upward or bursting forth; an upburst.
(v. t.) To rear, or bring up; to nurse.
(n.) The act of bursting upwards; a breaking through to the
surface; an upbreak or uprush; as, an upburst of molten matter.
(v. t.) To cheer up.
(v. t. & i.) To climb up; to ascend.
(n.) The borele.
(a.) Flung or thrown up.
(v. t.) To heave or lift up from beneath; to raise.
(v. t.) To hoard up.
(v. t.) To pull or pluck up.
(v. t.) To raise; to lift up.
(a.) In an erect position or posture; perpendicular; vertical,
or nearly vertical; pointing upward; as, an upright tree.
(a.) Morally erect; having rectitude; honest; just; as, a man
upright in all his ways.
(a.) Conformable to moral rectitude.
(a.) Stretched out face upward; flat on the back.
(n.) Something standing upright, as a piece of timber in a
building. See Illust. of Frame.
(v. t.) To rouse up; to rouse from sleep; to awake; to arouse.
(v. i.) To shoot upward.
(v. i.) To grow or shoot up like a spear; as, upspearing grass.
(v. i.) To stand up; to be erected; to rise.
(v. i.) To stare or stand upward; hence, to be uplifted or
conspicuous.
(v. i.) To start or spring up suddenly.
(n.) One who has risen suddenly, as from low life to wealth,
power, or honor; a parvenu.
(n.) The meadow saffron.
(a.) Suddenly raised to prominence or consequence.
(v. i. & i.) To rise, or cause to rise, in a swarm or swarms.
(v. i.) To swell or rise up.
(v. t.) To throw up.
(n.) See Throw, n., 9.
(v. t.) To trace up or out.
(v. t.) To train up; to educate.
(adv.) In a direction from lower to higher; toward a higher
place; in a course toward the source or origin; -- opposed to downward;
as, to tend or roll upward.
(adv.) In the upper parts; above.
(adv.) Yet more; indefinitely more; above; over.
(v. t. & i.) To rise upward in a whirl; to raise upward with a
whirling motion.
(n.) A cord or band of fibrous tissue extending from the
bladder to the umbilicus.
(n.) Accumulation in the blood of the principles of the urine,
producing dangerous disease.
(a.) Of or pertaining to uraemia; as, uraemic convulsions.
(n.) Amphibole resulting from the alternation of pyroxene by
paramorphism. It is not uncommon in massive eruptive rocks.
(n.) A salt of uranic acid.
(n.) A general term for the uranium phosphates, autunite, or
lime uranite, and torbernite, or copper uranite.
(n.) An element of the chromium group, found in certain rare
minerals, as pitchblende, uranite, etc., and reduced as a heavy, hard,
nickel-white metal which is quite permanent. Its yellow oxide is used
to impart to glass a delicate greenish-yellow tint which is accompanied
by a strong fluorescence, and its black oxide is used as a pigment in
porcelain painting. Symbol U. Atomic weight 239.
(a.) Pertaining to, or containing, uranium; designating those
compounds in which uranium has a lower valence as contrasted with the
uranic compounds.
(n.) A vessel for water for washing the hands; also, one to
hold wine or water.
(pl. ) of Urceolus
(n.) The canal by which the urine is conducted from the bladder
and discharged.
(n.) Urgency.
(n.) The quality or condition of being urgent; insistence;
pressure; as, the urgency of a demand or an occasion.
(a.) Of or pertaining to the urine; as, the urinary bladder;
urinary excretions.
(a.) Resembling, or being of the nature of, urine.
(n.) A urinarium; also, a urinal.
(v. i.) To discharge urine; to make water.
(a.) Alt. of Urinous
(a.) Of or pertaining to urine, or partaking of its qualities;
having the character or odor of urine; similar to urine.
(pl. ) of Urnful
(n.) A morbid swelling of the scrotum due to extravasation of
urine into it.
(n.) The urinary bladder.
(n.) One of the Urodela.
(a.) Of or pertaining to one or more median and posterior
elements in the hyoidean arch of fishes.
(n.) A urohyal bone or cartilage.
(n.) See Uronology.
(n.) Any one of the abdominal segments of an arthropod.
(n.) The abdomen, or post-abdomen, of arthropods.
(pl. ) of Urosteon
(a.) Resembling nettles; -- said of several natural orders
allied to urticaceous plants.
(a.) Having, or being of, no use; unserviceable; producing no
good end; answering no valuable purpose; not advancing the end
proposed; unprofitable; ineffectual; as, a useless garment; useless
pity.
(imp. & p. p.) of Usher
(imp. & p. p.) of Usurp
(n.) One who usurps; especially, one who seizes illegally on
sovereign power; as, the usurper of a throne, of power, or of the
rights of a patron.
(v. t.) That which is used; an instrument; an implement;
especially, an instrument or vessel used in a kitchen, or in domestic
and farming business.
(a.) Of or instrument to the uterus, or womb.
(a.) Born of the same mother, but by a different father.
(n.) The quality or state of being useful; usefulness;
production of good; profitableness to some valuable end; as, the
utility of manure upon land; the utility of the sciences; the utility
of medicines.
(n.) Adaptation to satisfy the desires or wants; intrinsic
value. See Note under Value, 2.
(n.) Happiness; the greatest good, or happiness, of the
greatest number, -- the foundation of utilitarianism.
(v. t.) To make useful; to turn to profitable account or use;
to make use of; as, to utilize the whole power of a machine; to utilize
one's opportunities.
(n.) A Utopian.
(n.) A little sac or vesicle, as the air cell of fucus, or
seaweed.
(n.) A microscopic cell in the structure of an egg, animal, or
plant.
(n.) A small, thin-walled, one-seeded fruit, as of goosefoot.
(n.) A utriculus.
(imp. & p. p.) of Utter
(n.) One who utters.
(adv.) In an utter manner; to the full extent; fully; totally;
as, utterly ruined; it is utterly vain.
(a.) Dotingly fond of, or servilely submissive to, a wife;
uxorious; also, becoming a wife; pertaining to a wife.
(n.) The radical regarded as characteristic of undecylic acid.
(v. t.) To degrade from the state of deity; to deprive of the
character or qualities of a god; to deprive of the reverence due to a
god.
(v. i.) To do less than is requisite or proper; -- opposed to
overdo.
(v. t.) To do less thoroughly than is requisite; specifically,
to cook insufficiently; as, to underdo the meat; -- opposed to overdo.
(v. t.) To go or move below or under.
(v. t.) To be subjected to; to bear up against; to pass
through; to endure; to suffer; to sustain; as, to undergo toil and
fatigue; to undergo pain, grief, or anxiety; to undergothe operation of
amputation; food in the stomach undergoes the process of digestion.
(v. t.) To be the bearer of; to possess.
(v. t.) To undertake; to engage in; to hazard.
(v. t.) To be subject or amenable to; to underlie.
(v. t.) To free from possession by a devil or evil spirit; to
exorcise.
(v. t.) To put off; to lay aside, as a garment.
(a.) Unworthy.
(n.) The reversal of what has been done.
(n.) Ruin.
(v. t.) To strip of drapery; to uncover or unveil.
(v. t.) To divest of clothes; to strip.
(v. t.) To divest of ornaments to disrobe.
(v. t.) To take the dressing, or covering, from; as, to undress
a wound.
(n.) A loose, negligent dress; ordinary dress, as distinguished
from full dress.
(n.) An authorized habitual dress of officers and soldiers, but
not full-dress uniform.
(a.) Not lived (in); -- with in.
(a.) Not dying; imperishable; unending; immortal; as, the
undying souls of men.
(a.) Not eared, or plowed.
(v. t.) To drive or draw from the earth; hence, to uncover; to
bring out from concealment; to bring to light; to disclose; as, to
unearth a secret.
(a.) Unending; endless.
(a.) Not equal; not matched; not of the same size, length,
breadth, quantity, strength, talents, acquirements, age, station, or
the like; as, the fingers are of unequal length; peers and commoners
are unequal in rank.
(a.) Ill balanced or matched; disproportioned; hence, not
equitable; partial; unjust; unfair.
(a.) Not uniform; not equable; irregular; uneven; as, unequal
pulsations; an unequal poem.
(a.) Not adequate or sufficient; inferior; as, the man was
unequal to the emergency; the timber was unequal to the sudden strain.
(a.) Not having the two sides or the parts symmetrical.
(a.) Not exact; inexact.
(n.) Absence or want of faith; faithlessness; distrust;
unbelief.
(a.) Not feat; not dexterous; unskillful; clumsy.
(v. t.) To strip of a fence; to remove a fence from.
(a.) Not defiled; pure.
(v. t.) To deprive of flesh; to reduce a skeleton.
(v. t.) To take apart, or destroy the frame of.
(v. t.) To deprive or divest or a frock; specifically, to
deprive of priestly character or privilege; as, to unfrock a priest.
(a.) Not exposed to fumes; not fumigated.
(v. t.) To strip of glass; to remove the glazing, or glass,
from, as a window.
(v. t.) To take off the glove or gloves of; as, to unglove the
hand.
(a.) Not godly; not having regard for God; disobedient to God;
wicked; impious; sinful.
(a.) Polluted by sin or wickedness.
(a.) Not stained with gore; not bloodied.
(a.) Not gored or pierced.
(v. t.) To raise or remove from the grave; to disinter; to
untomb; to exhume.
(v. t.) To deprive of a guard; to leave unprotected.
(a.) Ungual.
(n.) A lubricant or salve for sores, burns, or the like; an
ointment.
(pl. ) of Ungula
(a.) Of or pertaining to a hoof, claw, or talon; ungual.
(a.) Hoofed, or bearing hoofs; -- used only when these are of a
tincture different from the body.
(a.) Clumsy; awkward; as, an Unhandy man.
(a.) Not happy or fortunate; unfortunate; unlucky; as, affairs
have taken an unhappy turn.
(a.) In a degree miserable or wretched; not happy; sad;
sorrowful; as, children render their parents unhappy by misconduct.
(a.) Marked by infelicity; evil; calamitous; as, an unhappy
day.
(a.) Mischievous; wanton; wicked.
(a.) Not heard; not perceived by the ear; as, words unheard by
those present.
(a.) Not granted an audience or a hearing; not allowed to
speak; not having made a defense, or stated one's side of a question;
disregarded; unheeded; as, to condem/ a man unheard.
(a.) Not known to fame; not illustrious or celebrated; obscure.
(v. t.) To cause to lose heart; to dishearten.
(a.) Incautious; precipitate; heedless.
(v. t.) To take from the hinges; as, to unhinge a door.
(v. t.) To displace; to unfix by violence.
(v. t.) To render unstable or wavering; to unsettle; as, to
unhinge one's mind or opinions; to unhinge the nerves.
(v. t.) To free from being hitched, or as if from being
hitched; to unfasten; to loose; as, to unhitch a horse, or a trace.
(v. t.) To take or steal from a hoard; to pilfer.
(a.) Not hoped or expected.
(v. t.) To throw from a horse; to cause to dismount; also, to
take a horse or horses from; as, to unhorse a rider; to unhorse a
carriage.
(a.) Without hose.
(v. t.) To drive from a house or habitation; to dislodge;
hence, to deprive of shelter.
(a.) Not human; inhuman.
(a.) Uniaxial.
(n.) The condition of being united; quality of the unique;
unification.
(n.) A fabulous animal with one horn; the monoceros; -- often
represented in heraldry as a supporter.
(n.) A two-horned animal of some unknown kind, so called in the
Authorized Version of the Scriptures.
(n.) Any large beetle having a hornlike prominence on the head
or prothorax.
(n.) The larva of a unicorn moth.
(n.) The kamichi; -- called also unicorn bird.
(n.) A howitzer.
(a.) Not ideal; real; unimaginative.
(a.) Unideaed.
(n.) One who, or that which, unifies; as, a natural law is a
unifier of phenomena.
(a.) Having always the same form, manner, or degree; not
varying or variable; unchanging; consistent; equable; homogenous; as,
the dress of the Asiatics has been uniform from early ages; the
temperature is uniform; a stratum of uniform clay.
(a.) Of the same form with others; agreeing with each other;
conforming to one rule or mode; consonant.
(a.) A dress of a particular style or fashion worn by persons
in the same service or order by means of which they have a distinctive
appearance; as, the uniform of the artillery, of the police, of the
Freemasons, etc.
(v. t.) To clothe with a uniform; as, to uniform a company of
soldiers.
(v. t.) To make conformable.
(imp. & p. p.) of Unify
(n.) A woman who has borne one child.
(a.) Of or pertaining to a unit or units; relating to unity;
as, the unitary method in arithmetic.
(a.) Of the nature of a unit; not divided; united.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Unite
(v. t.) The act of uniting, or the state of being united;
junction.
(a.) Having the power of uniting; causing, or tending to
produce, union.
(v. t.) To reduce to a unit, or one whole; to form into a unit;
to unify.
(n.) Unity.
(pl. ) of Unity
(v. t.) To disjoint.
(a.) Not combed; disheveled; as, an urchin with unkempt hair.
(a.) Fig.; Not smoothed; unpolished; rough.
(a.) Not known; not apprehended.
(v. i.) To open or loose by lifting the latch; as, to unlatch a
door.
(v. t.) To recall, as former laughter.
(a.) Not having the claws and balls of the forefeet cut off; --
said of dogs.
(v. t.) To forget, as what has been learned; to lose from
memory; also, to learn the contrary of.
(v. t.) To fail to learn.
(v. t.) To free from a leash, or as from a leash; to let go; to
release; as, to unleash dogs.
(v. t.) To make unlike; to dissimilate.
(a.) Bereft or deprived of life.
(v. t.) To dislodge; to deprive of lodgment.
(v. t.) To make loose; to loosen; to set free.
(v. i.) To become unfastened; to lose all connection or union.
(a.) Not lucky; not successful; unfortunate; ill-fated;
unhappy; as, an unlucky man; an unlucky adventure; an unlucky throw of
dice; an unlucky game.
(a.) Bringing bad luck; ill-omened; inauspicious.
(a.) Mischievous; as, an unlucky wag.
(v. t.) To annul the marriage of; to divorce.
(a.) Not meant or intended; unintentional.
(v. t.) Alt. of Unmitre
(v. t.) To deprive of a miter; to depose or degrade from the
rank of a bishop.
(v. t.) To change the form of; to reduce from any form.
(a.) Having no moral perception, quality, or relation;
involving no idea of morality; -- distinguished from both moral and
immoral.
(a.) Not moved; fixed; firm; unshaken; calm; apathetic.
(v. t.) To deprive of nerve, force, or strength; to weaken; to
enfeeble; as, to unnerve the arm.
(adv.) Alt. of Unnethes
(a.) Ignoble.
(adv.) Ignobly.
(adv.) Not often.
(v. t.) To countermand an order for.
(a.) Not owned; having no owner.
(a.) Not acknowledged; not avowed.
(v. t.) To remove the paint from; to efface, as a painting.
(a.) Not paved; not furnished with a pavement.
(a.) Castrated.
(n.) Absence or lack of peace.
(v. t.) To deprive of a plaid.
(v. t.) To remove the plaits of; to smooth.
(v. t.) To deprive of lead, as of a leaden coffin.
(v. t.) To strip of plumes or feathers; hence, to humiliate.
(n.) Want of power; weakness.
(v. t.) To divest of the rank or authority of queen.
(a.) Not quick.
(n.) An ecclesiastical who holds but one benefice; --
distinguished from pluralist.
(a.) Not armed or armored; having no arms or weapons.
(a.) Having no hard and sharp projections, as spines, prickles,
spurs, claws, etc.
(a.) Ignorant of the arts.
(a.) Not artificial; plain; simple.
(a.) Not aware; not noticing; giving no heed; thoughtless;
inattentive.
(adv.) Unawares.
(v. t.) To deprive of existence.
(a.) Alt. of Unbegotten
(a.) Not yet begun; also, existing without a beginning.
(a.) Not existing.
(imp. & p. p.) of Unbind
(v. t.) To deprive of blessings; to make wretched.
(a.) Not blest; excluded from benediction; hence, accursed;
wretched.
(v. t.) To free from blindness; to give or restore sight to; to
open the eyes of.
(v. t.) To disclose freely; to reveal in confidence, as
secrets; to confess; -- often used reflexively; as, to unbosom one's
self.
() imp. & p. p. of Unbind.
(a.) Not bent or arched; not bowed down.
(v. t.) To deprive of the entrails; to disembowel.
(v. t.) To free from tension; to relax; to loose; as, to
unbrace a drum; to unbrace the nerves.
(v. t.) To separate the strands of; to undo, as a braid; to
unravel; to disentangle.
(v. t.) To demolish; to raze.
(a.) Disobedient.
(a.) Not canny; unsafe; strange; weird; ghostly.
(v. t.) To free from chains or slavery; to let loose.
(v. t.) To release from a charm, fascination, or secret power;
to disenchant.
(v. t.) To bereave of children; to make childless.
(v. t.) To make unlike a child; to divest of the
characteristics of a child.
(n.) One of the peculiar minute chitinous hooks found in large
numbers in the tori of tubicolous annelids belonging to the Uncinata.
(a.) Not civilized; savage; barbarous; uncivilized.
(a.) Not civil; not complaisant; discourteous; impolite; rude;
unpolished; as, uncivil behavior.
(v. t.) To loose the clasp of; to open, as something that is
fastened, or as with, a clasp; as, to unclasp a book; to unclasp one's
heart.
(a.) Not clean; foul; dirty; filthy.
(a.) Ceremonially impure; needing ritual cleansing.
(a.) Morally impure.
(v. i.) To cease from clinging or adhering.
(v. t.) To remove a cloak or cover from; to deprive of a cloak
or cover; to unmask; to reveal.
(v. i.) To remove, or take off, one's cloak.
(v. t. & i.) To open; to separate the parts of; as, to unclose
a letter; to unclose one's eyes.
(v. t. & i.) To disclose; to lay open; to reveal.
(v. t.) To free from clouds; to unvail; to clear from
obscurity, gloom, sorrow, or the like.
(v. t.) To detach or loose from a coach.
(a.) Unknown.
(a.) Uncommon; rare; exquisite; elegant.
(a.) Unfamiliar; strange; hence, mysterious; dreadful; also,
odd; awkward; boorish; as, uncouth manners.
(v. t.) To take the cover from; to divest of covering; as, to
uncover a box, bed, house, or the like; to uncover one's body.
(v. t.) To show openly; to disclose; to reveal.
(v. t.) To divest of the hat or cap; to bare the head of; as,
to uncover one's head; to uncover one's self.
(v. i.) To take off the hat or cap; to bare the head in token
of respect.
(v. i.) To remove the covers from dishes, or the like.
(v. t.) To deprive of a crown; to take the crown from; hence,
to discrown; to dethrone.
(n.) The act of anointing, smearing, or rubbing with an
unguent, oil, or ointment, especially for medical purposes, or as a
symbol of consecration; as, mercurial unction.
(n.) That which is used for anointing; an unguent; an ointment;
hence, anything soothing or lenitive.
(n.) Divine or sanctifying grace.
(n.) That quality in language, address, or the like, which
excites emotion; especially, strong devotion; religious fervor and
tenderness; sometimes, a simulated, factitious, or unnatural fervor.
(v. t.) To free from a curse or an execration.
(a.) Rising and falling in waves toward the margin, as a leaf;
waved.
(a.) Not dated; having no date; of unknown age; as, an undated
letter.
(n.) An umbilicus. See Umbilicus, 5 (b).
(a.) See Umbilical, 1.
(pl. ) of Umbo
(n.) Alt. of Umbriere
(n.) See Umbra, 2.
(a.) Shady; umbrageous.
(imp. & p. p.) of Umpire
(a.) Howling; wailing.
(v. i.) To howl, as a dog or a wolf; to wail; as, ululating
jackals.
(n.) The navel; the center.
(n.) Shade; shadow; obscurity; hence, that which affords a
shade, as a screen of trees or foliage.
(n.) Shadowy resemblance; shadow.
(n.) The feeling of being overshadowed; jealousy of another, as
standing in one's light or way; hence, suspicion of injury or wrong;
offense; resentment.
(v. t.) To shade; to shadow; to foreshadow.
(a.) Fruitful; copious; abundant; plentiful.
(n.) In the Shetland and Orkney Islands, one who holds property
by udal, or allodial, right.
(a.) Having an udder or udders.
(a.) Ulcerous; ulcerated.
(n.) A mineral occurring in white rounded crystalline masses.
It is a hydrous borate of lime and soda.
(pl. ) of Ulnare