There is no single definition of what raw is. Some would say it is electric charge, some would say it is direct pixel output, some would say it is ADC output, etc., while some - that it is what the camera manufacturer says it is.
Here we mostly deal with the raw that comes in the form of raw files, so for the moment let's consider only those raw files.
Adobe are suggesting the following: "RAW files contain uncompressed and unprocessed image data", but what is image data? Is normalization (artificial black level, ISO, white balance pre-conditioning, noise reduction, etc) allowed here and isn't considered processing? Is lossless compression considered no compression? Are files recorded in a lossy compressed mode are raw in name only?
Consider what Nikon are saying: "RAW image files ... contain all the image information captured by the camera's sensor, along with the image's metadata (the camera's identification and its settings, the lens used and other information). The NEF file is written to the memory card in either an uncompressed or 'lossless' compressed form." OK, how are we supposed to understand 'lossless' here? What is "image information", and what is not?
On a more serious and practical note, IMHO what is important for a shooter is the relation between "photo-" (light) and "-graph" (record, raw data).