miti- +
(Latin: make mild or gentle; mild, gentle, soft)
immitigability
Unable to be mitigated or appeased.
immitigable
1. Incapable of being alleviated, weakened, or softened.
2. That which cannot be mitigated: "We had to endure immitigable circumstances because of our financial losses."
immitigably
Unchangeably severe and unable to be weakened or softened.
mitigable
Anything which can be alleviated.
mitigant
1. Softening; lenient; lenitive.
2. Diminishing; easing; such as, pain.
mitigate, mitigates
1. To make something less severe, less harsh, or less violent.
2. To lessen or to try to lessen the seriousness or extent of something.
3. To moderate (a quality or condition) in force or intensity; to alleviate.
4. To lessen in force or intensity; such as, wrath, grief, harshness, or pain; to moderate.
5. To make less severe; to mitigate a punishment.
6. To make (a person, one's state of mind, disposition, etc.) milder or more gentle; to mollify; to appease.
mitigated
1. Made less severe or intense.
2. Something which was made less harmful, unpleasant, or bad.
mitigating
Making something less harmful, unpleasant or bad.
mitigation
1. To act in such a way as to cause an offense to seem less serious.
2. A partial excuse to mitigate censure.
3. An attempt to represent an offense as less serious than it appears by showing mitigating circumstances.
4. Steps taken to avoid or minimize negative environmental impacts.
Mitigation can include: avoiding the impact by not taking a certain action; minimizing impacts by limiting the degree or magnitude of the action; rectifying the impact by repairing or restoring the affected environment; reducing the impact by protective steps required with the action; and compensating for the impact by replacing or providing substitute resources.
mitigative
1. Moderating pain or sorrow by making it easier to bear.
2. Tending to alleviate, render mild, or to be soothing.
mitigator
1. Something that mitigates.
2. Someone who mitigates or who makes something less severe or harsh.
mitigatory
1. Moderating pain or sorrow by making it easier to bear.
2. Anything which can lessen the intensity of something that is painful or distressful.
unmitigable
Incapable of being mitigated: "He scolded his child with stern and unmitigable accusations."
unmitigated
1. Not diminished or moderated in intensity or severity.
2. Not decreased or eased in any way.
3. Not diminished or moderated in intensity or severity; unrelieved: "He was experiencing unmitigated suffering."
4. Without qualification or exception; absolute: "She told the police officer an unmitigated lie about how she was driving."
unmitigatedly
A reference to something which is unrelieved, unabated, unbroken, and that which is persistent.