Unideal, un-ī-dē′al, adj. not ideal, realistic, prosaic.—n. Unidē′alism.

Unidentate, ū-ni-den′tāt, adj. having but one tooth.—adj. Unidentic′ulate, having but one denticle.

Unidigitate, ū-ni-dij′i-tāt, adj. having a single functional digit.

Unidiomatic, un-id-i-o-mat′ik, adj. not according to the idiom of a language.

Unifacial, ū-ni-fā′shal, adj. having but one face or front surface, as a coral.

Unifarious, ū-ni-fā′ri-us, adj. with the parts arranged in one rank, uniserial.

Uniflorous, ū-ni-flō′rus, adj. one-flowered.

Unifoil, ū′ni-foil, adj. bearing only a single leaf.—n. a single leaf.—adjs. Unifō′liate, having a single leaflet, unifoliar; Unifō′liar, Unifō′liolāte, having a single leaflet, but compound in structure.

Uniform, ū′ni-form, adj. having one or the same form: having always the same manner or character: consistent with itself: agreeing with another.—n. a dress or livery of the same kind for persons who belong to the same body, as of a soldier.—v.t. U′niformise, to make uniform.—adj. Uniformitā′rian.—ns. Uniformitā′rianism, the doctrine in geology of Sir Charles Lyell (1797-1875), that the present is the type of all preceding ages, so far as these are revealed by the fossiliferous strata; Uniform′ity, state of being uniform: agreement with a pattern or rule: sameness: likeness between the parts of a whole.—adv. U′niformly.—n. U′niformness.—Act of Uniformity, an intolerant measure passed in 1662, by which a number of clergymen, variously stated at from 800 to 2000, were driven out of the English national church.

Unify, ū′ni-fī, v.t. to make into one.—adjs. U′nifīable, capable of being made one; Unif′ic, making one.—ns. Unificā′tion; U′nifīer. [L. unus, one, facĕre, to make.]