unlist is generic: you can write methods to handle
  specific classes of objects, see InternalMethods,
  and note, e.g., relist with the unlist method
  for relistable objects.
If recursive = FALSE, the function will not recurse beyond the
  first level items in x.
Factors are treated specially.  If all non-list elements of x
  are factor (or ordered factor) objects then the result
  will be a factor with
  levels the union of the level sets of the elements, in the order the
  levels occur in the level sets of the elements (which means that if
  all the elements have the same level set, that is the level set of the
  result).
x can be an atomic vector, but then unlist does nothing useful,
  not even drop names.
By default, unlist tries to retain the naming
  information present in x.  If use.names = FALSE all
  naming information is dropped.
Where possible the list elements are coerced to a common mode during
  the unlisting, and so the result often ends up as a character
  vector.  Vectors will be coerced to the highest type of the components
  in the hierarchy NULL < raw < logical < integer < double < complex < character
  < list < expression: pairlists are treated as lists.
A list is a (generic) vector, and the simplified vector might still be
  a list (and might be unchanged).  Non-vector elements of the list
  (for example language elements such as names, formulas and calls)
  are not coerced, and so a list containing one or more of these remains a
  list.  (The effect of unlisting an lm fit is a list which
  has individual residuals as components.)
  Note that unlist(x) now returns x unchanged also for
  non-vector x, instead of signalling an error in that case.