Emily Dickinson Lexicon
Dictionary: UN-MAN'NER-LI-NESS – UN-MAS'TER-ED
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Want of good manners; breach of civility; rudeness of behavior. Locke.
UN-MAN'NER-LY, a.
- Ill bred; not having good manners; rude in behavior; as, an unmannerly youth.
- Not according to good manners; as, an unmannerly jest. Swift.
UN-MAN'NER-LY, adv.
Uncivilly. Shak.
UN-MAN'NING, pp.
Depriving of the powers or qualities of a man.
UN-MAN'TLED, a.
Not covered or furnished with a mantle.
Not manufactured; not wrought into the proper form for use.
UN-MA-NUR'ED, a.
- Not manured; not enriched by manure.
- Uncultivated. Spenser.
UN-MARK'ED, a.
- Not marked; having no mark.
- Unobserved; not regarded; undistinguished. Pope.
UN-MAR'RED, a.
Not marred; not injured; not spoiled; not obstructed.
UN-MAR'RI-A-BLE, a.
Not marriageable. [Little used.] Milton.
UN-MAR'RIAGE-A-BLE, a.1
Not fit to be married.
UN-MAR'RIAGE-A-BLE, a.2
Not of a suitable age for marriage. [1841 Addenda only.]
The state or condition of not being fit to be married.
UN-MAR'RI-ED, a.
Not married; having no husband or no wife. Bacon.
UN-MAR'RY, v.t.
To divorce. Milton.
UN-MAR'SHAL-ED, a.
Not disposed or arranged in due order.
UN-MAS'CU-LATE, v.t.
To emasculate. Fuller.
UN-MAS'CU-LINE, a.
Not masculine or manly; feeble; effeminate. Milton.
UN-MAS'CU-LINE-LY, adv.
In an unmasculine manner.
UN-MASK', v.i.
To put off a mask.
UN-MASK', v.t.
To strip of a mask or of any disguise; to lay open what is concealed. Roscommon.
UN-MASK'ED, pp.
- Stripped of a mask or disguise.
- adj. Open; exposed to view. Dryden.
UN-MASK'ING, ppr.
Stripping off a mask or disguise.
UN-MAS'TER-A-BLE, a.
That can not be mastered or subdued. [Not in use.] Brown.
UN-MAS'TER-ED, a.
- Not subdued; not conquered.
- Not conquerable. He can not his unmaster'd grief sustain. Dryden.