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The ponies trotted away and I was left in the window ownerless.
2
And no more handkerchiefs had been found, ownerless, in their hall.
3
The house at Robin Hill, finished though it was, remained empty and ownerless.
4
The ownerless dogs of the village analyzed Minnie's nature, and found it satisfactory.
5
Among the free and ownerless pariah dogs of the East disease is almost unknown.
Usage of unowned in English
1
Vagrant as an unowned dog, he could roam the streets at pleasure.
2
There he lay, unowned, unknown, exposed to the flippant curiosity of a French mob!
3
There are very few unowned peculiar children left in Devil's Acre, so people will notice you.
4
The wind is unowned and any one who will may harness it to do his work.
5
I oughtn't to have left the child unowned.
6
And do you blame him for running his brand on the unowned cattle that roamed the range?
7
The electric forces of nature are unowned, whoever will may gather and direct them to do his purpose.
8
Thousands of cattle thus lived to old age, multiplied and increased, died and became food for worms, unowned.
9
We corralled the little herd every night, adding to it daily, scouting far and wide for unowned or wild cattle.
10
The epoch was truly Western; their ranges were controlled without investment, their cattle roamed the virgin pastures of an unowned land.
11
The ABORIGINAL inhabitants of this island enjoyed the same rights as those in other countries, of possessing themselves of land unowned and unoccupied.
12
It dealt, of course, with the beauties and singularities of the place, the streets, the people, and the quantities of unowned yellow dogs.
13
It's an unowned city in the sense that while many call themselves Dubliners, these mostly inhabit their own enclaves rather than the whole.
14
The Dranitsyn was home for a 10-day round-trip that would barely impinge on this vast, unowned emptiness which the Ancient Greeks sensed was there.
15
But, why should I, unowned, bearing a name to which I have no legal title, and virtually without relatives, aspire to one like you!
16
Unowned even to her innermost heart, a sort of dim hope had not quite died, that he might, after all, come back to her.