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uninhabitable

[ US /ˌənɪnˈhæbətəbəɫ/ ]
[ UK /ˌʌnɪnhˈæbɪtəbə‍l/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. not fit for habitation

How To Use uninhabitable In A Sentence

  • Two years ago the council blocked the demolition of a 100-year-old, uninhabitable shotgun cottage.
  • His cabin is uninhabitable in summer, let alone in winter.
  • The huanaco, happily for it, exists in a barren, desolate region, in its greatest part waterless and uninhabitable to human beings; and the chapter-heading refers to a singular instinct of the dying animals, in very many cases allowed, by the exceptional conditions in which they are placed, to die naturally. The Naturalist in La Plata
  • Now by daylight they could see that it was rocky and barren, uninhabitable. THREE IN ONE
  • From here, a telescope would show Earth as an uninhabited and uninhabitable world of water, with a few islands here and there.
  • Lenox, at that time, was as little known as Mount Desert; it was not until long afterwards that fashion found them out and made them uninhabitable to any but fashionable folks. Hawthorne and His Circle
  • If any homes are judged to have been left completely uninhabitable by the floods insurers are likely to face further claims for the cost of temporary accommodation.
  • New Orleans, for now, is uninhabitable, but the outlook is also bleak.
  • The appellant asserts that the building was uninhabitable when he moved in, and that to return it to that state would be a retrograde step.
  • Master Thorne, in the sixteenth century, expressed the resolute spirit of that energy in a phrase: "There is no land uninhabitable, nor sea innavigable"; and in every part of the globe this British spirit has applied itself to many a land that looked hopeless at first, and has frequently found it to be one: Terre Napoleón; a History of French Explorations and Projects in Australia
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