unimitatively

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English

Etymology

From unimitative +‎ -ly.

Adverb

unimitatively (not comparable)

  1. In an unimitative manner, not imitating something else.
    • 1898, Charlotte Porter and Helen A. Clarke, Introduction to The Complete Works of Robert Browning, New York: Thomas Y. Crowell, Volume 3, p. xix,
      This tremendous scene is, in some respects of stage action, a counterpart of the awful scene between Lady Macbeth and the Thane of Cawdor after Duncan’s murder. Yet how thoroughly and unimitatively is it reconstructed on opposite lines by the most original English pupil of the great Elizabethan wizard!
    • 1961, Kenneth A. Telford (translator), Aristotle’s Poetics: Translation and Analysis, Chicago: Henry Regnery, Section 25, p. 50,
      it is less of a mistake not to know that a female deer has no horns than to paint unimitatively.