uninhabitability love

uninhabitability

Definitions

from The Century Dictionary.

  • noun Uninhabitableness.

Etymologies

Sorry, no etymologies found.

Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word uninhabitability.

Examples

  • On account of their uninhabitability, their difficulty of access, and their unknown commercial value, the antarctic lands have claimed far less attention than the north polar regions.

    Wealth of the World's Waste Places and Oceania Jewett Castello Gilson

  • The Hotel Menlo and another Oakland hotel owned by Singer, the Ridge Hotel at 634 15th St., are both the subject of civil litigation "due to claims of uninhabitability," the affidavit said.

    SFGate: Top News Stories Henry K. Lee 2011

  • Sherwood told the conference: "Seven degrees would begin to create zones of uninhabitability due to unsurvivable peak heat stresses and 10C would expand such zones far enough to encompass a majority of today's population."

    Climate Ark Climate Change & Global Warming RSS Newsfeed 2009

  • Even scholars who are aware of the uninhabitability of the nuked ruins, or the disastrous climate changes caused by nuclear exchanges, advocate "minimum sufficient deterrence" regimes.

    Eric Margolis 2009

  • Sherwood told the conference: "Seven degrees would begin to create zones of uninhabitability due to unsurvivable peak heat stresses and 10C would expand such zones far enough to encompass a majority of today's population."

    unknown title 2009

  • Particularly now on a world running out of resources and threatening to heat up to the point of uninhabitability, there's an appeal to the idea of starting over.

    TrekMovie.com 2009

  • "The danger to the planet of global warming and the catastrophes it will produce, if left unchecked, including the uninhabitability of parts of the world, particularly some small states, is not the alarmist warnings of overzealous scientists," the prime minister said.

    Jamaica Gleaner Online 2009

  • Sherwood told the conference: "Seven degrees would begin to create zones of uninhabitability due to unsurvivable peak heat stresses and 10C would expand such zones far enough to encompass a majority of today's

    The Guardian World News 2009

Comments

Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.