0 complete, often describing something bad or unsuccessful that has no good or positive points:
1 (esp. of something unpleasant or unsuccessful) complete:
Military metaphors are particularly useful because they explicitly or implicitly characterise old age as an unmitigated enemy.
The unmitigated deployment of power strongly encourages the dominant speaker to attempt not to observe universal constraints.
However, analysis based on unmitigated conflict is at best partial at worst misleading.
But independence did not equal unmitigated state power.
An almost unmitigated strength of the work is its clear structure and accessibility.
Indeed, it is the occasion for unmitigated joy or at least moral neutrality.
These are then translated (problematically) into the theoretical language of mitigated and unmitigated disagreement strategies.
As the scene changes, the seams show, and such discontinuities, unmitigated by costume or staging, ultimately reveal the opera's ' setting' to be an imagined world.