Dictionary: UN-QUES'TION-A-BLY – UN-RA'ZOR-ED

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UN-QUES'TION-A-BLY, adv.

Without doubt; indubitably. Sprat.

UN-QUES'TION-ED, a.

  1. Not called in question; not doubted.
  2. Not interrogated; having no questions asked; not examined. Dryden.
  3. Indisputable; not to be opposed. B. Jonson.

UN-QUES'TION-ING, a.

Not calling in question; not doubting; unhestitating. J. M. Mason.

UN-QUICK', a.

  1. Not quick; slow.
  2. Not alive; motionless. [Not in use.] Daniel.

UN-QUICK'EN-ED, a.

Not animated; not matured to vitality; as, unquickened progeny. Blackstone.

UN-QUI'ET, a.

  1. Not quiet; not calm or tranquil; restless; uneasy; as, an unquiet person; an unquiet mind.
  2. Agitated; disturbed by continual motion; as, the unquiet ocean.
  3. Unsatisfied; restless. Pope.

UN-QUI'ET, v.t.

To disquiet. [Not in use.] Herbert.

UN-QUI'ET-LY, adv.

In an unquiet state; without rest; in an agitated state. Shak.

UN-QUI'ET-NESS, n.

  1. Want of quiet; want of tranquillity; restlessness; uneasiness. Taylor. Denham.
  2. Want of peace; as of a nation. Spenser.
  3. Turbulence; disposition to make trouble or excite disturbance. Dryden.

UN-QUI'ET-UDE, n.

Uneasiness; restlessness. [Obs.] [For this disquietude and inquietude are used.]

UN-RACK'ED, a.

Not racked; not poured from the lees.

UN-RAIS'ED, a.

Not elevated or raised. – Coleridge.

UN-RAK'ED, a.

  1. Not raked; as, land unraked.
  2. Not raked together; not raked up; as fire. Shak.

UN-RANG'ED, a.

Not ranged; not reduced to order.

UN-RAN'SACK-ED, a.

  1. Not ransacked; not searched.
  2. Not pillaged. Knolles.

UN-RAN'SOM-ED, a.

Not ransomed; not liberated from captivity or bondage by payment for liberty. Pope.

UN-RASH', a.

Not rash; not presumptuous. Clarendon.

UN-RAV'AG-ED, a.

Not wasted or destroyed. Burke.

UN-RAV'EL, v.i.

To be unfolded; to be disentangled.

UN-RAV'EL, v.t.

  1. To disentangle; to disengage or separate threads that are knit.
  2. To free; to clear from complication or difficulty. Addison.
  3. To separate connected or united parts; to throw into disorder, Nature all unravel'd. Dryden.
  4. To unfold, as the plot or intrigue of a play. Pope.

UN-RAV'EL-A-BLE, a.

That can not be disentangled.

UN-RAV'EL-ED, pp.

Unfolded; disentangled.

UN-RAV'EL-ING, ppr.

Disentangling; unfolding; clearing from difficulty.

UN-RAV'EL-MENT, n.

The development of the plot in a play. Mickel.

UN-RA'ZOR-ED, a.

Unshaven. Milton.