16 example sentences using abandoned.
Abandoned used in a sentence
Abandoned in a sentence as an adjective
I've abandoned a couple purchases because of that coupon code box.
"Also he's in an abandoned fairground for some reason.
This doesn't look like it expands much on what the Go web server does and it also looks like it's been abandoned.
I was going to get it but after friends abandoned it after about 10 days I figured it wasn't worth it.
But call me when the TSA is abandoned and the border guards are no longer treating immigrants like ****.
I think it sits at 40% occupancy, with entire wings boarded up, lights turned off and otherwise abandoned.
We abandoned that stand the moment it became inconvenient, in Vietnam if not earlier, and have not picked it up again since.
The article is full of good quotes, but my favorite is what he said after being abandoned by his mother:"It was a problem for me," he says.
I assume it's the chatty discussions which you're concerned about cooling down, so this would handle the problem case while avoiding the side effect on quiet/abandoned threads.
There's lots of code which doesn't get published because it's not relevant and if it is, it might be a one off project that I'd rather not make public rather than make it look like it's abandoned.
That's basically a laughable number, except it's the first tangible return on the dozens of web applications I've started and abandoned for the past 5 years.
It's a trade-off we have do for our freedom: should the Revolution be abandoned in any of the member countries, the allied countries should intervene to restore the right values.
"The bigger problem is that theyve abandoned interoperability.
Here in post-collapse Argentina, I semi-regularly attend a free bike repair workshop run by a bunch of anarchists who occupied a pizzeria abandoned in the collapse, twelve years ago.
Almost all news organizations have abandoned reporting in favor of editorial; have cultivated reader opinion in place of responsibility; and have traded ethical standards for misdirection and whatever consensus defines as forgivable.
"the notion that the governments raisin-administrators ward off chaotic gyrations in prices far-fetched: walnut and citrus farmers, after all, have abandoned similar systems in recent years without any ill effects"This issue has been studied extensively - "agricultural central banks" are a bad way to deal with a perishable commodity because they shift demand volatility onto the government's balance sheet and so dull the incentive for supply to adjust, or find ways to become more versatile.