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immoderate
[ ih-mod-er-it ]
adjective
- not moderate; exceeding just or reasonable limits; excessive; extreme.
Synonyms: extravagant, inordinate, unreasonable, exorbitant
- Obsolete. intemperate.
- Obsolete. without bounds.
immoderate
/ ɪˈmɒdərɪt; ɪˈmɒdrɪt /
adjective
- lacking in moderation; excessive
immoderate demands
- obsolete.venial; intemperate
immoderate habits
Derived Forms
- imˌmoderˈation, noun
- imˈmoderately, adverb
Other Words From
- im·moder·ate·ly adverb
- im·moder·ate·ness noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of immoderate1
Example Sentences
Madison in 1792 viewed the duty of political parties as acting to combat “the inequality of property, by an immoderate, and especially an unmerited, accumulation of riches.”
That leaves Mr. Netanyahu, himself, as the closest thing to a moderating influence in an immoderate government, but a spiral of bloodshed and reprisals could sorely test his juggling skills.
Regulators have issued rules demanding that recommendation algorithms spread only “positive energy” and a creator “Code of Conduct” that bans content that promotes “immoderate” lifestyles or seeks to create “hot issues in public opinion.”
In the immoderate “Poem of Ecstasy,” a solo violin sings of love.
The Polish operatic actress Helena Modjeska founded a 19th-century utopian colony in Anaheim, but it foundered, in no small part because of immoderate weather, like the wind.
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