ppl. a. (UN-1 8.)
1778. Johnson, Shakespeares Othello, I. iii. 80, note. The main, the whole, unextenuated.
1823. Southey, Hist. Penins. War, I. 237. The whole transaction was a business of pure, unmingled treachery, unprovoked, unextenuated.
1844. R. H. Horne, New Spirit of Age, I. 150. With a view to the exposition and denunciation of a false principle of composition, as exemplified in licentious works, which are unredeemed and unextenuated by any one sincere passion, and are consequently among the very worst kind of influences that could be exercised upon a rising generation.