| unchurchly |
combined form of churchly. |
| uncial |
(sometimes cap.) of, pertaining to, designating, or in a style of writing in large, rounded capital letters, used esp. in Greek and Latin manuscripts of the fourth to eighth century A.D. [2 definitions] |
| uncinematic |
combined form of cinematic. |
| uncircumcised |
not circumcised. |
| uncivil |
lacking good manners or courtesy; impolite. [2 definitions] |
| uncivilized |
not civilized; barbarous or wild. |
| unclad |
not dressed or covered; naked. |
| unclaimed |
combined form of claimed. |
| unclarified |
combined form of clarified. |
| unclasp |
to release from a grasp or embrace. [4 definitions] |
| unclassifiable |
combined form of classifiable. |
| uncle |
the brother or brother-in-law of one's father or mother. [2 definitions] |
| unclean |
dirty, soiled, or foul. [3 definitions] |
| uncleaned |
combined form of cleaned. |
| uncleanly1 |
not clean or cleanly. |
| uncleanly2 |
in an unclean manner. |
| unclear |
combined form of clear. |
| unclench |
to open from a clenched position; relax. |
| Uncle Sam |
a personification of the government or people of the United States as a tall thin man with a beard, wearing a top hat and red-and-white-striped trousers. [2 definitions] |
| Uncle Tom |
the title character in Uncle Tom's Cabin, a mid-nineteenth century novel by Harriet Beecher Stowe. Uncle Tom is a black slave whose religious beliefs move him to forgive his oppressors. [2 definitions] |
| uncliched |
combined form of cliched. |