How to Use unimagined in a Sentence

unimagined

adjective
  • Who knows what unimagined rhythms and sounds will be the result.
    Paul Herrera, Rolling Stone, 27 July 2022
  • And that’s why the non-unicorns out there might just be the best bet to take your team to hitherto unimagined heights.
    Mark C. Perna, Forbes, 18 Apr. 2023
  • Instead, the first of the big award shows of 2021 gave us the hitherto before unimagined … home red carpet.
    New York Times, 1 Mar. 2021
  • Neptune Frost mixes the whimsical with the didactic, the earth-bound with the unimagined.
    K. Austin Collins, Rolling Stone, 15 June 2022
  • Both events gave us something tragic and unimagined, unfolding in the span of only a few hours and watched in real time around the world.
    Jerry Saltz, Vulture, 13 Jan. 2021
  • What’s so striking about this year’s group is how many of them emerged almost instantly, seemingly out of nowhere, to meet unimagined crises.
    Geoff Colvin, Fortune, 12 May 2021
  • The big moment came after a year of unimagined challenges and unwavering drive for small business owners from across the country.
    Lindsay Kimble, PEOPLE.com, 2 Nov. 2021
  • The choral music was soaring, as were the camera angles, with the centuries-old work of master builders displayed in hitherto unimagined detail.
    Rebecca Mead, The New Yorker, 19 Sep. 2022
  • Regardless of what the naysayers continue to claim, streaming has been good for the music business and may eventually send it to unimagined heights in the future.
    Bobby Owsinski, Forbes, 21 Mar. 2021
  • The list of other needs, after more than a year of unimagined difficulty and disruption, is long: tutoring, mental health support, HVAC upgrades, training for teachers and staff.
    Washington Post, 23 Apr. 2021
  • Some others, wrapped in rice paper and fragrant tea leaves, contain knowledge to cure disease, enlighten us with ancient wisdom and invent unimagined products.
    Steve West, Sun Sentinel, 22 Dec. 2022
  • The property sector, which has provided a generation of Chinese with either the reality or the illusion of unimagined wealth, has crashed.
    Anne Stevenson-Yang, Forbes, 9 Dec. 2021
  • In taking the same trope a few steps to the left, inverting or casting it in light or shadow, the well-worn becomes scaffolding for a previously unheard perspective or yet unimagined possibility.
    Vivian Lam, WIRED, 24 Feb. 2023
  • These would be powerful steps in returning the nation to the constitutional government that has both unified us in the past and propelled us to unimagined stability and prosperity.
    WSJ, 3 Dec. 2020
  • In no time at all an unimagined universe of interiority opened before me, one equipped with its own theory, laws, and language, and constituting a worldview that could account for: everything.
    Dayna Tortorici, The New York Review of Books, 8 Oct. 2020
  • While most of my interviews with experts start with my having a grasp of my column’s direction and a relevant list of questions, my favorite interviews jettison off to lands unimagined, unexpected and as yet unexplored.
    Marni Jameson, Orlando Sentinel, 28 Apr. 2023
  • Occupying troops have committed atrocities on an unimagined scale.
    George Packer, The Atlantic, 21 Nov. 2022
  • The scientists’ findings stoked a global wave of research in nanotechnology as scientists searched for other unimagined molecular structures, leading to promising new materials for solar cells and light-emitting diodes, among other things.
    James R. Hagerty, WSJ, 15 July 2022
  • Possibilities range from incorporating the gas into building materials such as concrete to using it as a feedstock for chemicals like solvents or plastics to new, as-yet unimagined applications.
    Forbes, 17 June 2021
  • Technological advances lead to conceptual leaps in knowledge and the discovery of previously unimagined new paradigms.
    Serpil Erzurum, Fortune, 23 Mar. 2023

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'unimagined.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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