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How To Use Unmodernised In A Sentence

  • Unmodernised property can sell for up to 40 per cent of its modernised market value.
  • The best one, though, is defiantly unmodernised. Times, Sunday Times
  • ‘A significant number of the deaths will be because, in this area, houses are likely to be the older, unmodernised terraced type which are not well insulated or fuel efficient,’ he said.
  • Finding the unmodernised property to buy is often the hard part, of course. Times, Sunday Times
  • The house has four bedrooms, two bathrooms, one en-suite, a drawing room, a dining room, a morning room, a studio, kitchen/a breakfast room, a three attic rooms, a conservatory, a scullery, a cellar and a two-bedroom unmodernised annexe.
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  • We consider that the appropriate property type should be unmodernised family sized accommodation with 3 bedrooms or more.
  • Searches for unmodernised properties have waned by 41 per cent. The Sun
  • To move from unmodernised to modernised is proving to be an expensive business. Times, Sunday Times
  • It's beautiful, but the house is unmodernised to the point of being uninhabitable. Times, Sunday Times
  • It is not just owner-occupiers who are chasing unmodernised homes. Times, Sunday Times
  • The house is unmodernised but totally unspoilt. Times, Sunday Times
  • My parents lived all their lives in an unmodernised rented flat. Times, Sunday Times
  • It is an old problem, usually found in unmodernised farming countries.
  • He specialises in finding sites for self-builders and unmodernised buildings for wannabe renovators. Times, Sunday Times
  • There is also renewed interest in unmodernised 'doer-uppers'. Times, Sunday Times
  • In the village pub - unmodernised by any rapacious brewery, although in this decade new roadhouses spread like scabs along arterial roads - Donald hears unassuming rustics quote Shakespeare.
  • But Network Rail, formerly Railtrack, is concerned that more houses will mean more people using the local unmanned and unmodernised level crossing to reach the town centre and other facilities.
  • They soon discover that the cheaper end of the market means £375,000 for an unmodernised three-bedroom cottage in the middle of nowhere.
  • ‘What a very boring man, obsessed with the first world war,’ he says, all self-mockery, behind his cluttered desk in Private Eye's defiantly unmodernised Soho townhouse.

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