We have no meanings for "entirely uninhabited" in our records yet.
1 It is supposed to be entirely uninhabited , except in the hunting season.
2 The Rocky Mountain highland and the Great Plains, however, were not entirely uninhabited .
3 Routes originating from sparsely populated or entirely uninhabited places are excluded from the analysis.
4 A small island, but entirely uninhabited , was discovered by Lieutenant Ball in his passage to Norfolk Island.
5 The country was almost entirely uninhabited .
6 Neither settlers nor squatters were to be met with; it was entirely uninhabited , unless by ferocious bushrangers and bandits.
7 But the moment of annularity will only be visible from a tiny slice of Antarctica entirely uninhabited by humans.
8 During the winter season it is entirely uninhabited , but in the summer it is frequently visited, particularly by copper speculators.
9 Now, however, we were about to enter a wilderness which was entirely uninhabited , and little known even to our Kamchadal guides.
10 Although this country was exceedingly rich in soil, it was entirely uninhabited on our side (the east) of the river.
11 On attempting to ascend the river further one would soon reach a vast extent of country entirely uninhabited except around the headwaters.
12 All these islands are now entirely uninhabited ; but upon one of the Caracas are found wild goats of large size, brown, and extremely swift.
13 This district borders on the desert of the Crau, a vast plain of stones reaching to the mouth of the Rhone and almost entirely uninhabited .
14 "I believe this part of the coast to be entirely uninhabited . "
Grammar, pronunciation and more
This collocation consists of: Entirely uninhabited across language varieties