ppl. a. (UN-1 8.)

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a. 1719.  Addison, Evid. Chr. Relig., v. (1733), 41. I have only discovered one of those channels by which the history of our Saviour might be conveyed pure and unadulterated, through those several ages.

2

1765.  Blackstone, Comm., I. 64. That these customs … continued down to the present time, unchanged and unadulterated.

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1823.  J. Badcock, Dom. Amusem., 30. Flour which is pure and unadulterated.

4

1881.  Westcott & Hort, Grk. N. T., Introd. § 38. An unadulterated transcript of the original text.

5

  Hence Unadulteratedly adv.

6

1891.  Kipling, City Dreadf. Nt., Railway Folk, i. Jamalpur is unadulteratedly ‘Railway.’

7