English
Etymology
From un- + fudged.
Adjective
unfudged (comparative more unfudged, superlative most unfudged)
- Not fudged.
2007 June 25, Alastair Macaulay, “33 Years, and Good to the Last Pirouette”, in New York Times[1]:She falls headlong at the end of the ballet’s Tema Russo movement, and the unfudged dynamics make the moment seem like a tragic thunderclap.