Unborn in a sentence as an adjective

Here's some I just made up: "We shouldn't fear death any more than an unborn baby fears birth. Death is our true birth."

Forcing deafness on your unborn child is another.

He died by driving fast, impatiently, killing his wife and unborn child. We shared a love of fast cars and recklessness.

If you're for it, then you're seen as bigoted against the rights of unborn children to not be murdered. And even if you could think that way, you shouldn't.

The unborn future billions should be discounted to the present value so that we can accurately compare them. What's the discount rate?

Many people recognize that women do not have the right to ****** their unborn child. One good thing from the Gosnell case is that the reality of your agendas are becoming more exposed by the day.

I used to say the same thing until someone explained to me that they are fighting for the same rights of the unborn children. I'm not saying that position is right or wrong; I'm just saying that said position exists.

Certainly those unborn ghosts include greater poets than Keats, scientists greater than Newton. We know this because the set of possible people allowed by our DNA so massively exceeds the set of actual people.

You have either 0% or 100% probability of being over 7 feet tall, but what about your unborn child? Genetics aside, if 1 out of 10000 kids are born over 7 ft and you have a gun to your head, how will you calculate your kids odds of being that tall?

While primitive brain waves have been detected in unborn babies as early as 7 weeks, it is not until 22 weeks that sustained patterns can definitely be recorded. Some women will now notice that their baby 'jumps' with a loud sound."

Even more so in light of your support of women being allowed to ****** their unborn children. Like I said above, at least the Gosnell case is opening the eyes of more people to the reality of the abortion agenda.

In the back of my mind, I know why they say that: They just don't want to admit my contribution would be worth more than a single-digit percentage of their unborn company. In the end, I can see through all that and I am not about to let anyone take advantage of me.

We also know that stress while a mother is pregnant affects the epi-genes of an unborn kid, making him more susceptible to stress - which again delay gratification harder. We also know from research that depression has a direct impact on negative attachment between mother and baby.

The heart of the matter is the way public debt allows the current generation of voters to live at the expense of those as yet too young to vote or as yet unborn. No. The heart of the matter is the way public debt allows relatively few to massively and outrageously profit via post-9/11 escalation of defense spending.

It's really an interesting moral discussion - it's like an extension of the "sacrifice one person to save five" classical dilemma, but I really can't agree with his flippant assertion that our moral obligation to the unborn future billions eclipses that to our obligation to help our contemporaries. And he's not even talking about preserving the planet for the future generations, he's merely concerned with them being born in the first place.

And here's another one: The idea that someone can come up with a solution: - prevent anyone else henceforth from using it without paying them, - enforce that by force and using taxpayer money, - stretching over political boundaries, - not even giving the remotest fair chance to the unborn to ever come up with that solution, - charge a price fixed by whatever whims tickle that person's fancy and deny others of a possibly cheaper solution - just to protect a possibly overvalued idea . .

The TL:DR; I get from this is: "we're clean freaks, and thus our immune systems go wonky and start attacking good things because they lack bad things to go after, including unborn children that get autism as a result" This totally validates my need to go play in the mud and eat sketchy food from carts on the street.

Unborn definitions

adjective

not yet brought into existence; "unborn generations"