[
UK
/ʌnmˈɪtɪɡˌeɪtɪd/
]
[ US /ənˈmɪtəˌɡeɪtɪd/ ]
[ US /ənˈmɪtəˌɡeɪtɪd/ ]
ADJECTIVE
-
not diminished or moderated in intensity or severity; sometimes used as an intensifier
an unmitigated lie
an unmitigated horror
unmitigated suffering
How To Use unmitigated In A Sentence
- For all the abuse, there are moments of unmitigated delight as well.
- It cannot be that the unmitigated and disgusting selfism of Louis Philippe, and his efforts to ally himself with every crowned head in Europe -- not for the glory of France, but for his own -- will much longer be overlooked or their perils masked. Edmond Dantès
- Sands and Eastman, Limericked, Victuallers, went and, with his unmitigated astonissment, hickicked at the dun and dorass against all the runes and, when challenged about the pretended hick (it was kickup and down with him) on his solemn by the imputant imputed, said simply: I appop pie oath, Phillyps Captain. Finnegans Wake
- The evening was an unmitigated disaster.
- The conference begins this week against a backdrop of unmitigated gloom.
- It's a long time since I heard such unmitigated snobbery.
- The Manila water privatisation hasn't been an unmitigated success.
- It is not surprising that a woman, young, beautiful and vivacious, living in a court where corruption was all around her, where an unmarried empress was rendering herself notorious by her gallantries, stung to the quick by the utter neglect of her husband, insulted by the presence of his mistresses, and disgusted by his unmitigated boobyism, should have sought solace in the friendship of others. The Empire of Russia
- Given the precarious balance between a successful trip and an unmitigated tragedy, it seems naive that people externalise risk in the belief that ‘it will never happen to me.’
- It's like the EU: brilliant idea in theory, but an absolute bloody mishandled, unmitigated disaster.