Emily Dickinson Lexicon
Dictionary: UN-RIV'ET-ING – UN-RUF'FLE
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UN-RIV'ET-ING, ppr.
Unfastening; loosing from rivets.
UN-ROBE', v.t.
To strip of a robe; to undress; to disrobe. Young.
UN-ROB'ED, pp.
Undressed; disrobed.
UN-ROB'ING, ppr.
Divesting of robes; undressing.
UN-ROIL'ED, a.
Not rendered turbid; not disturbed in mind.
UN-ROLL', v.t.
- To open what is rolled or convolved; as, to unroll cloth.
- To display. Dryden.
UN-ROLL'ED, pp.
Opened, as a roll; displayed.
UN-ROLL'ING, ppr.
Opening, as a roll; displaying.
UN-RO'MAN-IZ-ED, a.
Not subjected to Roman arms or customs. Whitaker.
UN-RO-MAN'TIC, a.
Not romantic; not fanciful. Swift.
UN-RO-MAN'TIC-AL-LY, adv.
Not romantically.
UN-ROOF', v.t.
To strip off the roof or covering of a house.
UN-ROOF'ED, pp.
Stripped of the roof.
UN-ROOF'ING, ppr.
Stripping of the roof.
UN-ROOST'ED, a.
Driven from the roost. Shak.
UN-ROOT', v.i.
To he torn up by the roots.
UN-ROOT', v.t.
To tear up by the roots; to extirpate; to eradicate; as, to unroof an oak. Dryden.
UN-ROOT'ED, pp.
Extirpated; torn up by the roots.
UN-ROOT'ING, ppr.
Tearing up by the roots; extirpating.
UN-ROUGH', a. [unruff'.]
Not rough; unbearded; smooth. Shak.
UN-ROUND'ED, a.
Not made round. Donne.
UN-ROUT'ED, a.
Not routed; not thrown into disorder. Beaum.
UN-ROY'AL, a.
Not royal; unprincely. Sidney.
UN-ROY'AL-LY, a.
Not like a king; not becoming a king. R. Potter.
UN-RUF'FLE, v.i.
To cease from being ruffled or agitated; to subside to smoothness. Addison.