English

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Etymology

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From un- +‎ fudgeable.

Adjective

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unfudgeable (comparative more unfudgeable, superlative most unfudgeable)

  1. Not fudgeable.
    • 2015 July 19, Anne McElvoy, “The BBC is being asked to defend its funding and it doesn’t like it”, in The Observer[1]:
      Where there are more unfudgeable differences on the BBC’s future is on its aspiration to be a universal service, whereas John Whittingdale, the culture and media secretary, thinks it should be “narrower and more targeted”.