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List of synonyms from "unequaled" to synonyms from "unexpectedly"
Discover all the synonyms available for the terms unexceptional, unequivocal, unexpansive, unexaggerated, unequivocally and many more. Click on one of the words below and go directly to the synonyms associated with it.
Definition of the day : « unexaggerated »
- As in literal : adj word for word; exact, real
- As in naked : adj manifest, evident
- It also has the peculiarly Russian quality of unexaggerated realism.
- Extract from : « An Outline of Russian Literature » by Maurice Baring
- I mean to lay before you the truth—the unexaggerated truth, but to conceal nothing.
- Extract from : « Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, No. 327 » by Various
- Such is the unexaggerated picture of our condition under a Constitution founded upon the republican principle of equal rights.
- Extract from : « United States Presidents' Inaugural Speeches » by Various
- I have nothing to add, except that this is a true and unexaggerated account of what I saw.
- Extract from : « Yorkshire Oddities, Incidents and Strange Events » by S. Baring-Gould
- He said well, “Life is not habitually seen from any common platform so truly and unexaggerated as in the light of literature.”
- Extract from : « Familiar Studies of Men and Books » by Robert Louis Stevenson
- We can praise her performance as interesting, unexaggerated, and full of opportune instruction.
- Extract from : « The House on the Moor, v. 1/3 » by Mrs. Oliphant
- This aspect is founded on the relation which they bear to the real events and the unexaggerated afflictions of his own life.
- Extract from : « The Collected Writing of Thomas De Quincey, Vol. II » by Thomas De Quincey
- Agnes Grey should please such critics as Mr. Lewes, for it is “true” and “unexaggerated” enough.
- Extract from : « Charlotte Bronte and Her Circle » by Clement K. Shorter
- He would bring in a modifying influence of outdoor life and unexaggerated sentiment.
- Extract from : « The Ladies Lindores, Vol. 3(of 3) » by Margaret Oliphant
- These reports would be truthful, unexaggerated, and non-sensational statements that could be relied upon.
- Extract from : « A Story of the Red Cross » by Clara Barton