Dictionary: UN-IN-TER-MIT'TING-LY – UN-ION

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UN-IN-TER-MIT'TING-LY, adv.

Without cessation; continually. Mitford.

UN-IN-TER-MIX'ED, a.

Not intermixed; not mingled.

UN-IN'TER-PO-LA-TED, a.

Not interpolated; not inserted at a time subsequent to the original writing.

UN-IN-TER'PRE-TED, a.

Not explained or interpreted.

UN-IN-TER'RED, a.

Not buried. Pollok.

UN-IN-TER-RUPT'ED, a.

  1. Not interrupted; not broken. Addison.
  2. Not disturbed by intrusion or avocation.

UN-IN-TER-RUPT'ED-LY, adv.

Without interruption; without disturbance.

UN-IN-TOX'I-CA-TING, a.

Not intoxicating.

UN-IN-TRENCH'ED, a.

Not intrenched; not defended by intrenchments. Pope.

UN-IN'TRI-CA-TED, a.

Not perplexed; not obscure or intricate. [Not in use.] Hammond.

UN-IN-TRO-DU'CED, a.

Not introduced; not properly conducted; obtrusive. Young.

UN-IN-UR'ED, a.

Not inured; not hardened by use of practice. Philips.

UN-IN-VA'DED, a.

Not invaded.

UN-IN-VENT'ED, a.

Not invented; not found out. Milton.

UN-IN-VENT'IVE, a.

Not inventive.

UN-IN-VENT'IVE-LY, adv.

Not inventively.

UN-IN-VEST'ED, a.

  1. Not invested; not clothed. Dwight.
  2. Not converted into some species of property less fleeting than money; as, money uninvested. Hamilton.

UN-IN-VES'TI-GA-BLE, a.

That can not be investigated or searched out. Ray.

UN-IN-VES'TI-GA-TED, a.

Not investigated.

UN-IN-VES'TI-GA-TIVE, a.

Not adapted or given to investigation.

UN-IN-VID'I-OUS, a.

Not invidious.

UN-IN-VIT'ED, a.

Not invited; not requested; not solicited. Philips.

UN-IN-VIT'ING, a.

Not inviting. Stewart.

UN-IN-VOK'ED, a.

Not invoked.

UN-ION, n. [Fr. union; It. unione; L. unio, to unite, from unus, one.]

  1. The act of joining two or more things into one, and thus forming a compound body or a mixture; or the junction or coalition of things thus united. Union differs from connection, as it implies the bodies to be in contact, without an intervening body; whereas things may be connected by the intervention of a third body, as by a cord or chain. One kingdom, joy and union without end. Milton.
  2. Concord; agreement and conjunction of mind, will, affections or interest. Happy is the family where perfect union subsists between all its members.
  3. The junction or united existence of spirit and matter; as, the union of soul and body.
  4. Among painters, a symmetry and agreement between the several parts of a painting. Cyc.
  5. In architecture, harmony between the colors in the materials of a building. Cyc.
  6. In ecclesiastical affairs, the combining or consolidating of two or more churches into one. This can not be done without the consent of the bishop, the patron, and the incumbent. Union is by accession, when the united benefice becomes an accessory of the principal; by confusion, where the two titles are suppressed, and new one created, including both; and by equality, where the two titles subsist, but are equal and independent. Cyc.
  7. States united. Thus the United States of America are sometimes called the Union. Marshall. Hamilton.
  8. A pearl. [L. unio.] [Not in use.] Union, or Act of union, the net by which Scotland was united to England, or by which the two kingdoms were incorporated into one, in 1707. Legislative union, the union of Great Britain and Ireland, in 1800. Union by the first intention, in surgery, the process by which the opposite surfaces of recent wounds, when they are kept in contact with each other, grow together and unite without suppuration; the result of a wonderful self-healing power in living bodies. Cyc.