Unlimited in a sentence as an adjective

People would catch on a lot quicker if it were called "unlimited salary.

Yahoo Japan came in and offered adsl 1mbit speed for $20 a month unlimited.

It's scary because this mob has global reach, unlimited power, but isn't always right.

The users balk when the price is raised, even though unlimited streaming and DVDs for a month still cost less than a decent meal.

That's a lot!Yeah, you can also store things like mail, documents, and backups on there too!Are those unlimited too?No, those have a max of 5GB.

If you're not selling me a gigabit connection with unlimited bandwidth than don't tell me that's what you're selling.

It's the land of unlimited corporate malfeasance, unchecked pollution, and a ban on fire codes.

This is sometimes called -- in one of the most Orwellian coinages in the industry -- "unlimited vacation days.

Encrypted data must be stored for an unlimited time to facilitate possible decryption in the future.

And it has unlimited storage for App backups, iTunes store music, and iBooks, and a 5GB limit for documents, e-mail, and "other stuff", and a 30-day cache of all of the photos I've taken.

An entire generation of slum-dwelling children have their own bathrooms, kitchens, and access to unlimited knowledge, technology, and medicine.

If anything, the essentially unlimited copyright of today encourages less creative output and less innovation.

Anybody can buy rocks, but nobody can buy a man vacation, so a man who demonstrates ability to take long vacations must be able to buy virtually unlimited amounts of rocks.

"Doing free tech support for non-technical people is a wonderful thought, but it can also provide a harsh lesson in the dangers of unlimited liability for open-ended, no-fee, no-contract work.

Unlimited definitions

adjective

having no limits in range or scope; "to start with a theory of unlimited freedom is to end up with unlimited despotism"- Philip Rahv; "the limitless reaches of outer space"

See also: limitless

adjective

without reservation or exception

See also: outright straight-out

adjective

that cannot be entirely consumed or used up; "an inexhaustible supply of coal"

See also: inexhaustible