Emily Dickinson Lexicon
Dictionary: UN-LUST'Y – UN-MAN'NER-ED
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UN-LUST'Y, a.
Not lusty; not stout; weak.
UN-LUTE', v.t.
To separate things cemented or luted; to take the lute or clay from.
UN-LUT'ED, pp.
Separated, as luted vessels.
UN-LUT'ING, ppr.
Separating, as luted vessels.
UN-LUX-U'RI-OUS, a.
Not luxurious.
UN-MAD'DEN-ED, a.
Not maddened.
UN-MADE', pp.
- Deprived of its form or qualities. Woodward.
- adj. Not made; not yet formed. Spenser.
- Omitted to be made. Blackmore.
UN-MAG-NET'IC, a.
Not having magnetic properties. Cavallo.
UN-MAID'EN-LY, a.
Not becoming a maiden. Hall.
UN-MAIM'ED, a.
Not maimed; not disabled in any limb; sound; entire. Pope.
That can not be maintained or supported. Story.
UN-MAK'A-BLE, a.
Not possible to be made. [Little used.] Grew.
UN-MAKE', v.t.
- To destroy the form and qualities which constitute a thing what it is. God does not make or unmake things to try experiments. Burnet.
- To deprive of qualities before possessed.
UN-MAK'ING, ppr.
Destroying the peculiar properties of a thing.
UN-MA-LI'CIOUS, a.
Not malicious. Cowley.
The quality or state of being unmalleable.
UN-MAL'LE-A-BLE, a.
Not malleable; not capable of being hammered into a plate, or of being extended by beating.
UN-MAN', v.t.
- To deprive of the constitutional qualities of a human being, as reason, &c. South.
- To deprive of men; as, to unman a ship.
- To emasculate; to deprive of virility.
- To deprive of the courage and fortitude of a man; to break or reduce into irresolution; to dishearten; to deject. Dryden. Pope.
- To dispeople; as, towns unmanned. Goldsmith.
UN-MAN'AGE-A-BLE, a.
- Not manageable; not easily restrained, governed or directed; not controllable.
- Not easily wielded. Locke.
UN-MAN'AGE-A-BLY, adv.
So as not to be manageable.
UN-MAN'A-GED, a.
- Not broken by horsemanship. Taylor.
- Not tutored; not educated. Felton.
- Not becoming a human being. Collier.
- Unsuitable to a man; effeminate. Unmanly warmth and tenderness of love. Addison.
- Not worthy of a noble mind; ignoble; base; ungenerous; cowardly.
UN-MAN'LI-NESS, n.
State of being unmanly.
UN-MAN'NED, pp.
Deprived of the qualities of a man.
UN-MAN'NER-ED, a.
Uncivil; rude. B. Jonson.