Undestroyable
(Un`de*stroy"a*ble) a. Indestructible.

Undeterminable
(Un`de*ter"mi*na*ble) a. Not determinable; indeterminable. Locke.

Undeterminate
(Un`de*ter"mi*nate) a. Nor determinate; not settled or certain; indeterminate. South. Un`de*ter"mi*nate*ness, n. Dr. H. More.

Undetermination
(Un`de*ter`mi*na"tion) n. Indetermination. Sir M. Hale.

Undevil
(Un*dev"il) v. t. [1st pref. un- + devil.] To free from possession by a devil or evil spirit; to exorcise. [Obs.]

They boy having gotten a habit of counterfeiting . . . would not be undeviled by all their exorcisms.
Fuller.

Undevotion
(Un`de*vo"tion) n. Absence or want of devotion.

Undid
(Un*did") imp. of Undo.

Undifferentiated
(Un*dif`fer*en"ti*a`ted) a. Not differentiated; specifically (Biol.), homogenous, or nearly so; — said especially of young or embryonic tissues which have not yet undergone differentiation that is, which show no visible separation into their different structural parts.

Undigenous
(Un*dig"e*nous) a. [L. unda a wave + -genous.] Generated by water. [R.] Kirwan.

Undigestible
(Un`di*gest"i*ble) a. Indigestible.

Undight
(Un*dight") v. t. [1st pref. un- + dight.] To put off; to lay aside, as a garment. [Obs.] Spenser.

Undigne
(Un*digne") a. Unworthy. [Obs.] Chaucer.

Undine
(Un*dine") n. [G. undine, or F. ondin, ondine, from L. unda a wave, water.] One of a class of fabled female water spirits who might receive a human soul by intermarrying with a mortal.

Undiocesed
(Un*di"o*cesed) a. Unprovided with a diocese; having no diocese. Milton.

Undirect
(Un`di*rect") v. t. [1st pref. un- + direct, v. t.] To misdirect; to mislead. [Obs.]

who make false fires to undirect seamen in a tempest.
Fuller.

Undirect
(Un`di*rect"), a. [Pref. un- not + direct.] Indirect.

Undirected
(Un`di*rect"ed), a. [In senses 1 and 2, pref. un- not + directed; in sense 3 properly p. p. of undirect.]

1. Not directed; not guided; left without direction.

2. Not addressed; not superscribed, as a letter.

3. Misdirected; misled; led astray. [R.]

Undirectly
(Un`di*rect"ly) adv. Indirectly. Strype.

Undiscerning
(Un`dis*cern"ing) n. Want of discernment. [R.] Spectator.

Undisclose
(Un`dis*close") v. t. [1st pref. un- + disclose.] To keep close or secret. [Obs.] Daniel.


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