Emily Dickinson Lexicon
Dictionary: UN-PLEAS'ING-NESS – UN-POL-LUT'ED
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Want of qualities to please. Milton.
Not pleasurable. – Coleridge.
UN-PLEDG'ED, a.
Not pledged; not mortgaged.
UN-PLI'A-BLE, a.
Not pliable; not easily bent.
UN-PLI'A-BLY, adv.
In an unpliable manner.
UN-PLI'ANT, a.
- Not pliant; not easily bent; stiff. Wotton.
- Not readily yielding the will; not compliant
UN-PLOW'ED, a.
Not plowed. Mortimer.
UN-PLUMB', a.
Not perpendicular. – Burke.
UN-PLUME', v.t.
To strip of plumes or feathers; to degrade. Glanville.
UN-PLUM'ED, pp. [or adj.]
Deprived of plumes; destitute of plumes.
UN-PLUN'DER-ED, a.
Not plundered or stripped.
UN-PO-ET'IC, or UN-PO-ET'IC-AL, a.
- Not poetical; not having the beauties of verse.
- Not becoming a poet. Corbet.
UN-PO-ET'IC-AL-LY, adv.
- In a manner not comporting with the nature of poetry.
- In a manner unbecoming a poet.
UN-POINT'ED, a.
- Having no point or sting. B. Jonson.
- Not having marks by which to distinguish sentences, members, and clauses in writing.
- Not having the vowel points or marks; as, an unpointed manuscript in Hebrew or Arabic. M. Stuart.
UN-POIS'ED, a. [s as z.]
Not poised; not balanced. Thomson.
UN-POIS'ON, v.t. [s as z.]
To remove or expel poison. South.
UN-PO'LAR-IZ-ED, a.
Not polarized; not having polarity.
UN-POL'I-CI-ED, a.
Not having civil polity, or a regular form of government.
UN-POL'ISH-ED, a.
- Not polished; not made smooth or bright by attrition. Stillingfleet.
- Not refined in manners; uncivilized; rude; plain. Dryden.
UN-PO-LITE', a.
- Not refined in manners; not elegant
- Not civil; not courteous; rude. [See Impolite.]
UN-PO-LITE'LY, adv.
In an uncivil or rude manner.
UN-PO-LITE'NESS, n.
- Want of refinement in manners; rudeness.
- Incivility; want of courtesy.
UN-POL'I-TIC, a.
Impolitic. [The latter is used.]
UN-POLL'ED, a.
- Not registered as a voter.
- Unplundered; not stripped. Fanshaw.
UN-POL-LUT'ED, a.
Not polluted; not defiled; not corrupted.