Emily Dickinson Lexicon
Dictionary: UNTHOUGHT-OF – UN-TIM'BER-ED
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UNTHOUGHT-OF, a. [Unthought of.]
Not thought of; not regarded; not heeded. Shak.
UN-THREAD', v.t. [unthred'.]
- To draw or take out a thread from; as, to unthread a needle.
- To loose. Milton.
UN-THREAD'ED, pp.
Deprived of a thread.
UN-THREAD'ING, ppr.
Depriving of a thread.
UN-THREAT'EN-ED, a. [unthret'ened.]
Not threatened; not menaced. K. Charles.
UN-THREAT'EN-ING, a.
Not indicating a menace.
UN'THRIFT, n.
A prodigal; one who wastes his estate by extravagance. Dryden.
UN-THRIFT'I-LY, adv.
Without frugality. Collier.
UN-THRIFT'I-NESS, n.
Waste of property without necessity or use; prodigality; profusion. Hayward.
UN-THRIFT'Y, a.
- Prodigal; lavish; profuse; spending property without necessity or use. Sidney.
- Not thriving; not gaining property; as, an unthrifty farmer.
- Not gaining flesh; as, an unthrifty ox.
- Not vigorous in growth, as a plant.
UN-THRIV'ING, a.
Not thriving; not prospering in temporal affairs; not gaining property.
UN-THRONE', v.t.
To remove from a throne, or from supreme authority; to dethrone.
UN-THRON'ED, pp.
Removed from a throne; deposed.
UN-THRONG'ED, a.
Not crowded by a multitude.
UN-TI'DI-LY, adv.
In an untidy manner.
UN-TI'DI-NESS, n.
- Want of tidiness or neatness.
- Unseasonableness.
UN-TI'DY, a.
- Not tidy; not seasonable; not ready.
- Not neatly dressed; not in good order.
UN-TIE', v.t.
- To loosen, as a knot; to disengage the parts that form a knot. Untie the knot.
- To unbind; to free from any fastening; as, to untie an iron chain. Waller.
- To loosen coils or convolution; as, snakes untied. Pope.
- To loose; to separate something attached; as, to untie the tongue.
- To resolve; to unfold; to clear. Watts.
UN-TI'ED, pp.
- Loosed, as a knot; unbound; separated; resolved.
- adj. Not tied; not bound or gathered in a knot; loose.
- Not fastened with a knot.
- Not held by any tie or band.
UN-TIL', prep. [un and till. See Till.]
- To; used of time. He and his sons were priests of the tribe of Dan, until the day of the captivity. Judges xviii.
- To; used of objects. [Obs.] Spenser.
- Preceding a sentence or clause, to; that is, to the event mentioned, or the time of it; as, until this hour; until this year. The scepter shall not depart from Judah–until Shiloh come. Gen. xlix.
- To the point or place of. In open prospect nothing bounds our eye, Until the earth seems join'd unto the sky. Dryden.
- To the degree that. Thou shalt push Syria, until they be consumed. 2 Chron. xviii. Note. Until is always the same part of speech in fact and has the same signification. The only difference is that it is followed sometimes by a single word denoting time, and in other cases by a verb denoting an event, or a word denoting place or degree. The sense is in all cases to; and till may be used as its substitute, and in modem usage it is most common.
UN-TILE', v.t.
To take the tiles from; to uncover by removing tiles. Swift.
UN-TIL'ED, a.
Stripped of tiles; not tiled.
UN-TIL'ING, ppr.
Stripping of tiles.
UN-TILL'ED, a.
Not tilled; not cultivated. Mortimer.
UN-TIM'BER-ED, a.
- Not furnished with timber. Shak.
- Not covered with timber trees; as, untimbered land.