Emily Dickinson Lexicon
Dictionary: UN-SCULP'TUR-ED – UN-SE'CRET
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UN-SCULP'TUR-ED, pp.
Not engraved.
UN-SCUTCH'EON-ED, a.
Not honored with a coat of arms. Pollok.
UN-SEAL', v.t.
To break or remove the seal of; to open what is sealed; as, to unseal a letter.
UN-SEAL'ED, pp.
- Opened; as something sealed.
- adj. Not sealed; having no seal, or the seal broken. Shak.
UN-SEAL'ING, ppr.
Breaking the seal of; opening.
UN-SEAM', v.t.
To rip; to cut open. Shak.
UN-SEAM'ED, pp.
Ripped; cut open.
UN-SEARCH'A-BLE, a. [unserch'able.]
That can not be searched or explored; inscrutable; hidden; mysterious. The counsels of God are to us unsearchable. Rogers.
UN-SEARCH'A-BLE-NESS, n. [unserch'ableness.]
The quality or state of being unsearchable, or beyond the power of man to explore. Bramhall.
UN-SEARCH'A-BLY, adv. [unserch'ably.]
In a manner so as not to be explored.
UN-SEARCH'ED, a. [unserch'ed.]
Not searched; not explored; not critically examined.
UN-SEARCH'ING, a.
Not searching; not penetrating.
UN-SEAR'ED, a.
Not seared; not hardened. Pollok.
UN-SEA'SON-A-BLE, a. [unsee'znable.]
- Not seasonable; not being in the proper season or time. He called at an unseasonable hour.
- Not suited to the time or occasion; unfit; untimely; ill timed; as, unseasonable advice; an unseasonable digression.
- Late; being beyond the usual time. He came home at an unseasonable time of night.
- Not agreeable to the time of the year; as, an unseasonable frost. The frosts of 1816, in June, July and August in New England, were considered unseasonable, as they were unusual.
UN-SEA'SON-A-BLE-NESS, n. [supra.]
The quality or, state of being unseasonable, ill timed, or out of the usual time.
UN-SEA'SON-A-BLY, adv.
Not seasonably; not in due time, or not in the usual time; not in the time best adapted to success. Dryden. Arbuthnot.
UN-SEA'SON-ED, a. [unsee'znd.]
- Not seasoned; not exhausted of the natural juices and hardened for use; as, unseasoned wood, boards, timber, &c.
- Not inured; not accustomed; not fitted to endure any thing by use or habit; as, men unseasoned to tropical climates are exposed to fevers.
- Unformed; not qualified by use or experience; as, an unseasoned courtier. Shak.
- Not salted; not sprinkled, filled or impregnated with any thing to give relish; as, unseasoned meat.
- Unseasonable. [Not in use.] Shak.
UN-SEAT', v.t.
To throw from the seat. Cowper.
UN-SEAT'ED, pp.
- Thrown from the seat.
- adj. Not seated; having no seat or bottom.
- Not settled with inhabitants; as, unseated lands. Wolcott. [We usually say, unsettled.]
UN-SEAT'ING, ppr.
Throwing from a seat.
The state of being unable to sustain the ordinary violence of the sea in a tempest. Kent.
UN-SEA'WOR-THY, a.
Not fit for a voyage; not able to sustain the violence of the sea; as, the ship is unseaworthy.
UN-SEC'OND-ED, a.
- Not seconded; not supported. The motion was unseconded; the attempt was unseconded.
- Not exemplified a second time. [Not in use.] Brown.
UN-SE'CRET, a.
Not secret; not close; not trusty. Shak.
UN-SE'CRET, v.t.
To disclose; to divulge. [Not used.] Bacon.