The Collaborative International Dictionary
Unwork \Un*work"\ ([u^]n*w[^u]k"), v. t. [1st pref. un- + work.] To undo or destroy, as work previously done.
Wiktionary
Etymology 1 vb. (context transitive English) To undo or destroy (work previously done). Etymology 2
n. The lack or absence of work; worklessness.
Usage examples of "unwork".
It helped considerably to know that he was not alone in the world, was not the only one with the ability to espy secret horrors lurking in innocent-looking pools of water and unworked stone.
One wall was bare, unworked stone: the naked rock of the granite monolith itself.
His coat was dark gray wool without a stitch of embroidery, the stallion's saddle cloth simple, and his sword's hilt and scabbard had been covered in unworked boarhide ever since it came into his possession, nothing to pull a second glance.
But he couldn't leave the office, not until that bedamned, unworking comm link awoke with some news.
But he couldn't leave the office, not until that bedamned, unworking comlink awoke with some news.