[
UK
/ʌnbɹˈəʊkən/
]
[ US /ənˈbɹoʊkən/ ]
[ US /ənˈbɹoʊkən/ ]
ADJECTIVE
-
not subdued or trained for service or use
unbroken colts -
not broken; whole and intact; in one piece
fortunately the other lens is unbroken -
(especially of promises or contracts) not violated or disregarded
promises kept
unbroken promises -
marked by continuous or uninterrupted extension in space or time or sequence
the unbroken quiet of the afternoon
cars in an unbroken procession -
(of farmland) not plowed
unplowed fields
unbroken land
How To Use unbroken In A Sentence
- Specimens are rarely found in one unbroken piece, and the process of reconstituting them is akin to completing a jigsaw puzzle.
- The view of the unbroken forest canopy stretching away to the horizon defies description; it is a vision of a world untroubled by time, a revelation of the hugeness and wholeness of nature.
- Such survivals in the unbroken tradition of the cottage garden are now rare examples of such excellence and are very scarce indeed.
- In very appealing reasoning it is also argued that the complete unbroken circle, symbolizes the Buddhist wheel of life.
- Some horses are sold unbroken - that is, before a horse learns to take a rider.
- In 1989, he gave 63 solo concerts nationwide, a record that is still unbroken.
- You can enjoy the extraordinary sight unbroken cloud plains that stretch out before you.
- There is the unity involved in continuous unbroken descent from a common origin, and there is unity of effective interconnexion and mutual dependence. The Unity of Civilization
- The upshot is that the parents of Irish babies are averaging a mere 5.5 hours of unbroken sleep.
- The story begins with dysfunctional grandparents and extends itself to Mitchell's life in an unbroken line that will make students of social services work nod knowingly.