Emily Dickinson Lexicon
Dictionary: UN-KING'LIKE, or UN-KING'LY – UN-LAID'
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UN-KING'LIKE, or UN-KING'LY, a.
Unbecoming a king; not noble. Milner. Shak.
UN-KISS'ED, a.
Not kissed. Shak.
UN'KLE, n. [See UNCLE.]
UN-KNELL'ED, a.
Untolled. Byron.
UN-KNIGHT'LY, a.
Unbecoming a knight. Sidney.
UN-KNIT', v.t.
- To separate threads that are knit; to open; to loose work that is knit or knotted. Shak.
- To open. Shak.
UN-KNOT', v.t.
To free from knots; to untie.
UN-KNOT'TED, pp.
Freed from knots; untied.
UN-KNOW', v.t.
To cease to know. [Not in use.]
UN-KNOW'A-BLE, a.
That can not be known. Watts.
UN-KNOW'ING, a.
Not knowing; ignorant; with of. Unknowing of deceit. Pope.
UN-KNOW'ING-LY, adv.
Ignorantly; without knowledge or design. Addison.
UN-KNOWN', a.
- Not known. The author of the invention is unknown.
- Greater than is imagined. Bacon.
- Not having had cohabitation. Shak.
- Not having communication. Addison.
UN-LA'BOR-ED, a.
- Not produced by labor; as, unlabored harvests. Dryden.
- Not cultivated by labor; not tilled. Blackmore.
- Spontaneous; voluntary; that offers without effort; natural. And from the theme unlabor'd beauties rise. Tickel.
- Easy; natural; not stiff; as, an unlabored style. Roscoe.
UN-LA-BO'RI-OUS, a.
Not laborious; not difficult to be done. Milton.
UN-LA-BO'RI-OUS-LY, adv.
Without labor.
UN-LACE', v.t.
- To loose from lacing or fastening by a cord or strings passed through loops and holes; as, to unlace a helmet or a garment.
- To loose a woman's dress.
- To divest of ornaments. Shak.
- In sea language, to loose and take off a bonnet from a sail.
UN-LAC'ED, pp.
Loosed from lacing; unfastened.
UN-LAC'ING, ppr.
Loosing from lacing or fastening.
UN-LACK'EY-ED, a.
Unattended with a lackey. Cowper.
UN-LADE', v.t.
- To unload; to take out the cargo of; as, to unlade a ship.
- To unload; to remove, as a load or burden. Acts xxi.
UN-LAD'EN, pp. [of Lade.]
Unloaded.
UN-LAD'ING, ppr.
Removing the cargo from a ship.
UN-LA'DY-LIKE, a.
Not lady-like.
UN-LAID', a.
- Not placed; not fixed. Hooker.
- Not allayed; not pacified; not suppressed. Milton.
- Not laid out, as a corpse. B. Jonson.