What is the meaning of UNMI. Phrases containing UNMI
See meanings and uses of UNMI!UNMI
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Acronyms & AI meanings
Finance and Insurance Decisions
Do What You Said You Would Do
Community Blood Services
Beijing University Chemistry
Domain Name System
minor salivary gland
Australasian Society for Emergency Medicine
Southern Appalachian Writers Cooperative
Construire Ensemble Jeunes
Galaxies Second
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a.
Unmindful; inattentive; heedless; careless.
v. t.
To deprive of a miter; to depose or degrade from the rank of a bishop.
n.
A black man; especially, one of a race of black or very dark persons who inhabit the greater part of tropical Africa, and are distinguished by crisped or curly hair, flat noses, and thick protruding lips; also, any black person of unmixed African blood, wherever found.
superl.
Pure; unmixed; unadulterated.
v. t.
To separate, as things mixed.
superl.
Not intricate or difficult; evident; manifest; obvious; clear; unmistakable.
superl.
Separate from all heterogeneous or extraneous matter; free from mixture or combination; clean; mere; simple; unmixed; as, pure water; pure clay; pure air; pure compassion.
v. i.
Bright; clear; pure; unmixed.
adv.
Purely; unmixedly; absolutely.
a.
Not alloyed; not reduced by foreign admixture; unmixed; unqualified; pure; as, unalloyed metals; unalloyed happiness.
a.
Incapable of being mistaken or misunderstood; clear; plain; obvious; evident.
Superl.
Unmixed; pure; entire; absolute; unqualified.
v. t.
Alt. of Unmitre
a.
Uncompounded; pure; unmixed.
a.
Simple; unmixed. See Mere, a.
n.
The quality or state of being simple, unmixed, or uncompounded; as, the simplicity of metals or of earths.
a.
Pure; undefiled; unmixed; fresh; new; as, virgin soil; virgin gold.
superl.
Unmixed; undiluted; as, to take liquor straight.
a.
Not made by brewing; unmixed; pure; genuine.
a.
Of or relating to tones or sounds; specifically (Phon.), applied to, or distingshing, a speech sound made with tone unmixed and undimmed by obstruction, such sounds, namely, the vowels and diphthongs, being so called by Dr. James Rush (1833) " from their forming the purest and most plastic material of intonation."
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