Unhurt in a sentence as an adjective

"Prince Philip unhurt in crash" said the BBC.

I hope their employees will get trough these crazy times unhurt.

The modern steel-frame buildings were unhurt, and that style of structure stands vindicated.

- If I do engage and **** the opponent, will I have to return to base to heal, or will I make it relatively unhurt?

He hasn't been convicted to any material degree: He's still free, unhurt, and in possession of the item.

I could try to rationalize it away later, but I definitely wouldn't be unhurt in the moment.

Assuming your neighbour is miraculously unhurt, the answer is no.

There was only a single time when he fell from it sideways unhurt, but now he goes up and down like a pro without any supervision.

The difference being that the new one can survive a straight t-bone at 50-70km/h and everyone walks out unhurt, while that's not necessarily the case with the old one.

I realize that someone walking away unhurt from what would have been a fatal collision might feel that it was a miracle, but it might just have been good engineering.

I rolled a 7 year old economy car and found the onboard computer activated a pyrotechnic device that pulled my seatbelt tight so I found myself upside down but entirely unhurt.

Some of the banks of seats were thrown far above the fuselage in great parabolas, shot as if from a cannon by the centrifugal force of the aft end of the fuselage swinging in its majestic, flaming arc. What must it have been like to take that ride, alive, aloft, alone, aware, unhurt as yet, and looking down on the green earth?

While these are edge cases, they're the edge cases people are worried about, and the source of the ill-definedness: "unhurt as much as possible" implicitly chooses some ethical tradeoff that people can easily have different answers to.

Unhurt definitions

adjective

not injured

See also: unharmed unscathed whole

adjective

free from danger or injury; "the children were found safe and sound"