Undiscreet to Unequity
Undiscreet
(Un`dis*creet") a. Indiscreet. Chaucer.
Un`dis*creet"ly, adv. Un`dis*creet"ness.
Un`dis*cre"tion n. Indiscretion.
Undispensable
(Un`dis*pen"sa*ble) a.
1. Indispensable.
2. Unavoidable; inevitable. [Obs.] Fuller.
3. Not to be freed by dispensation. [Obs.]
Undispensed
(Un`dis*pensed") a.
1. Not dispensed.
2. Not freed by dispensation. [R.] Tooker.
Undisposedness
(Un`dis*pos"ed*ness) n. Indisposition; disinclination.
Undisputable
(Un*dis"pu*ta*ble) a. Indisputable. Addison. Un*dis"pu*ta*ble*ness, n.
Undistinctive
(Un`dis*tinc"tive) a. Making no distinctions; not discriminating; impartial.
As undistinctive Death will come here one day.
Dickens. Undistinctly
(Un`dis*tinct"ly) adv. Indistinctly.
Undivided
(Un`di*vid"ed) a.
1. Not divided; not separated or disunited; unbroken; whole; continuous; as, plains undivided by rivers or
mountains.
2. Not set off, as a share in a firm; not made actually separate by division; as, a partner, owning one half
in a firm, is said to own an undivided half so long as the business continues and his share is not set off
to him.
3. Not directed or given to more than one object; as, undivided attention or affection. Shak.
4. (Bot.) Not lobed, cleft, or branched; entire.
Undividual
(Un`di*vid"u*al) a. Indivisible. [Obs.]
True courage and courtesy are undividual companions.
Fuller. Undivisible
(Un`di*vis"i*ble) a. Indivisible.
Undo
(Un*do") v. t. [AS. undn. See 1st Un-, and Do to perform.]
1. To reverse, as what has been done; to annul; to bring to naught.
What's done can not be undone.
Shak.
To-morrow, ere the setting sun,
She 'd all undo that she had done.
Swift.