Definitions

from The Century Dictionary.

  • In an immitigable manner.

from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.

  • adverb In an immitigable manner.

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • adverb In an immitigable manner.

Etymologies

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

immitigable +‎ -ly

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Examples

  • A conversation is immitigably two-sided and always to some degree mysterious; it requires faith.

    MY EMPIRE OF DIRT Manny Howard 2010

  • A conversation is immitigably two-sided and always to some degree mysterious; it requires faith.

    MY EMPIRE OF DIRT Manny Howard 2010

  • A conversation is immitigably two-sided and always to some degree mysterious; it requires faith.

    MY EMPIRE OF DIRT Manny Howard 2010

  • A conversation is immitigably two-sided and always to some degree mysterious; it requires faith.

    MY EMPIRE OF DIRT Manny Howard 2010

  • 'But yet,' suggested Caroline, 'not immitigably wretched?'

    Shirley, by Charlotte Bronte 2004

  • He continued immitigably grave, either because he thought it becoming in a place over which death had just passed, or for more personal reasons.

    The Portrait of a Lady 2003

  • He thought that so many years of town life might have made her a little less rustic in the end: the York State of 1835 or of 1840 need not have remained York State so immitigably.

    On the Stairs Henry B. Fuller

  • He continued immitigably grave, either because he thought it becoming in a place over which death had just passed, or for more personal reasons.

    Chapter LV 1917

  • Where his forerunners had been idealist, epicurean, or adoring, he was brutal, cynical and immitigably realist.

    English Literature: Modern Home University Library of Modern Knowledge G. H. Mair 1906

  • The music, which at another time would have swept her away on some rich current of emotion, now seemed to island her in her own thoughts, to create an artificial solitude in which she found herself more immitigably face to face with her fears.

    Sanctuary Edith Wharton 1899

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