Crossword clues for untorn
untorn
Wiktionary
a. Not torn
Usage examples of "untorn".
Oddly, her clothing was remarkably untorn for someone who had ridden the hurtling camper off the embankment and then one hundred fifty feet down the hill before she had fallen out.
Its easy to apply the law of similarity because the torn material is in essence like the untorn cloth around it, and to use the law of contagion to spread that cloth over the area with which it was formerly in contact.
It seemed unlikely that an abandoned house would have been left with all shades down, or, if it had, that all of them would still be rigidly fastened, unflapped and untorn by winds over the years, undamaged by whatever stones or other vicissitudes of time had breached most of their glass.
Packing up all her untorn gowns, she gathered Trevor and a few other loyal servants and drove to the country to Wildwood.
He sat down at his ink-splattered desk, found a pen and some untorn paper, and scribbled the draft of an answer for Caesar.
His tunic was clean, unspotted, untorn, but his legs and sandal laces were streaked with the olive color of drying gore.
By grasping it as she wriggled the rest of the way free, she broke her fall slightly, although the hard stone still bruised her through the untorn suit.
She seemed in slightly better form, and Elf realized she wore new boots and a fresh, untorn apron.
But the garments worn by these hill people were whole, untorn, unripped.
This field was thankfully untorn and he led the team across it at a lope towards the woodline.
Yet when this great man, after whom Linnaeus himself named the baobab tree Adansonia digitata, was invited to become a member of the Institute a little before I had the honour of addressing it, he did not possess a whole shirt nor yet an untorn pair of breeches in which he could attend, still less a coat, God rest his soul.
It seemed unlikely that an abandoned house would have been left with all shades down, or, if it had, that all of them would still be rigidly fastened, unflapped and untorn by winds over the years, undamaged by whatever stones or other vicissitudes of time had breached most of their glass.