Word Meanings - UNFRIENDED - Book Publishers vocabulary database
Wanting friends; not befriended; not countenanced or supported. Goldsmith. If Richard indeed does come back, it must be alone, unfollowed, unfriended. Sir W. Scott.
Related words: (words related to UNFRIENDED)
- INDECOMPOSABLENESS
Incapableness of decomposition; stability; permanence; durability. - INDECOROUSNESS
The quality of being indecorous; want of decorum. - INDESERT
Ill desert. Addison. - INDEVOTE
Not devoted. Bentley. Clarendon. - INDECENCY
1. The quality or state of being indecent; want of decency, modesty, or good manners; obscenity. 2. That which is indecent; an indecent word or act; an offense against delicacy. They who, by speech or writing, present to the ear or the - INDEXICAL
Of, pertaining to, or like, an index; having the form of an index. - SUPPORTABLE
Capable of being supported, maintained, or endured; endurable. -- Sup*port"a*ble*ness, n. -- Sup*port"a*bly, adv. - WANTLESS
Having no want; abundant; fruitful. - WANTON
wanting , hence expressing negation + towen, p. p., AS. togen, p. p. of teón to draw, to educate, bring up; hence, 1. Untrained; undisciplined; unrestrained; hence, loose; free; luxuriant; roving; sportive. "In woods and wanton wilderness." - INDEFICIENCY
The state or quality of not being deficient. Strype. - SUPPORTATION
Maintenance; support. Chaucer. Bacon. - INDEFATIGABLY
Without weariness; without yielding to fatigue; persistently. Dryden. - UNFRIEND
One not a friend; an enemy. Carlyle. - INDEBT
To bring into debt; to place under obligation; -- chiefly used in the participle indebted. Thy fortune hath indebted thee to none. Daniel. - INDEFECTIBLE
Not defectible; unfailing; not liable to defect, failure, or decay. An indefectible treasure in the heavens. Barrow. A state of indefectible virtue and happiness. S. Clarke. - INDEPENDENCY
Doctrine and polity of the Independents. (more info) 1. Independence. "Give me," I cried , "My bread, and independency!" Pope. - INDEMNITY
1. Security; insurance; exemption from loss or damage, past or to come; immunity from penalty, or the punishment of past offenses; amnesty. Having first obtained a promise of indemnity for the riot they had committed. Sir W. Scott. 2. - INDEFEASIBLE
Not to be defeated; not defeasible; incapable of being annulled or made void; as, an indefeasible or title. That the king had a divine and an indefeasible right to the regal power. Macaulay. - INDETERMINABLE
Not determinable; impossible to be determined; not to be definitely known, ascertained, defined, or limited. -- In`de*ter"mi*na*bly, adv. - INDECOROUS
Not decorous; violating good manners; contrary to good breeding or etiquette; unbecoming; improper; out of place; as, indecorous conduct. It was useless and indecorous to attempt anything more by mere struggle. Burke. Syn. -- Unbecoming; unseemly; - EARTHLY-MINDED
Having a mind devoted to earthly things; worldly-minded; -- opposed to spiritual-minded. -- Earth"ly-mind`ed*ness, n. - EVENMINDED
Having equanimity. - CARNAL-MINDEDNESS
Grossness of mind. - REMINDER
One who, or that which, reminds; that which serves to awaken remembrance. - HIGH-MINDEDNESS
The quality of being highminded; nobleness; magnanimity. - FINDER
One who, or that which, finds; specifically , a small telescope of low power and large field of view, attached to a larger telescope, for the purpose of finding an object more readily.