Limbo in a sentence as a noun

There is no such thing as a "limbo", not in any sane security procedure.

This is absolutely correct, at this time he was in limbo, he was not being detained, but he could not leave.

It's harder to move, as you have this limbo of not being able to buy a house until you've sold the previous one.

The reason there are two passages through what seem to be limbo is that Inception is Christian allegory.

To give an analogy, consider what is going on in the minds of the Cypriots while their accounts are in limbo.

H1-B leaves a person in a limbo world where they are essentially an indentured servant of the company.

How is living in limbo for a decade, with literally no single piece of paper identifying you as a human being is "cutting in line?

> How is living in limbo for a decade, with literally no single piece of paper identifying you as a human being is "cutting in line?

I don't want to be in a safe job for the rest of my life, I want to be in a limbo all the time, that will make me push forward and fight to a have a better life.

It's very easy for newcomers to place their local repo into a limbo or failure state that they can't get out of without consulting a git guru.

The most important reason for it was to keep new features from being stuck in limbo just because they happened to be part of the same branch as a feature that was taking a long time to be production ready.

Martin Luther King didn't live in a world where we imprison innocent men in legal limbo without trial or habeas corpus, or where we officially sanctioned torture and the oubliette.

"Martin Luther King didn't live in a world where we imprison innocent men in legal limbo without trial or habeas corpus, or where we officially sanctioned torture and the oubliette.

For example, adaptive clinical trials have been known to be theoretically superior to the Phase I/II/III design for 15 years, yet are still in limbo[1] at the FDA; their proponents are still banned from trying them out.

What difference would you expect to see 7 years after the collapse of a massive housing bubble if there weren't some pending shortage of rental housing?edit: The distressed housing, as it is released and foreclosures are actually completed instead of artificially being held in limbo, will of course largely be converted to rentals.

Limbo definitions

noun

the state of being disregarded or forgotten

See also: oblivion

noun

an imaginary place for lost or neglected things

noun

(theology) in Roman Catholicism, the place of unbaptized but innocent or righteous souls (such as infants and virtuous individuals)