uninhabited

[ UK /ˌʌnɪnhˈæbɪtɪd/ ]
[ US /ˌənɪnˈhæbətɪd/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. not having inhabitants; not lived in
    gaping doors of uninhabited houses
    an uninhabited island
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How To Use uninhabited In A Sentence

  • The 60 mostly uninhabited islands which comprise the group lie within an area only 20 miles square.
  • These nine were, according to the barbarous practice of those kind of people, marooned, that is, set on shore on an uninhabited island. Lives of the Most Remarkable Criminals Who have been Condemned and Executed for Murder, the Highway, Housebreaking, Street Robberies, Coining or other offences
  • One of the largest of the latter is the pine marten, which is still found in remote and uninhabited parts of our country. Chatterbox, 1906
  • Many of these storms, if they occurred in uninhabited areas, would pass without any notice or impacts.
  • The group of uninhabited islets about 180 km north of Taiwan are claimed by Taiwan, China and Japan.
  • His Canadian co-pilot Lorne White will be travelling alongside him over some of the most uninhabited regions in the world.
  • This uninhabited islet would have been our second stage had we been allowed to cross the Lake, as it is of the people themselves; it is as far beyond it to the mainland, called Manda, as from Masantu's to Mpabala. The Last Journals of David Livingstone from 1865 to His Death
  • The earth is largely uninhabited from the perspective of geographical area. Sound Politics: Schools, minds, closed yet again
  • You will find yourself on a mysterious and uninhabited island, solving loads of puzzles to unlock its secrets. The Sun
  • So they decided to take them to an uninhabited planet that would serve as an asylum and where they could roam free and act goofy. Christianity Today
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