unbrokenun‧bro‧ken /ʌnˈbrəʊkən $ -ˈbroʊ-/ adjective - unbroken egg yolks
- an unbroken silence
- The horizon is flat, unbroken by even a tree.
- Even if the man drifted close to sleep, which the stillness encouraged, the union remained unbroken.
- The mould thus stubbornly remained unbroken.
- The premise of her nocturnes is that they need to be performed with a beautiful sound and a flexible, unbroken line.
- The sense of an unbroken participatory field of reality was central to the primal mind as well.
- The skin was unbroken and smooth, as if it were now untroubled by worries in endless sleep.
- Thus an unbroken column of water extends in the tree from the root cells to the leaf cells.
ADVERB► almost· At home a constitutional commitment to democracy has resulted in an almost unbroken dominance of conservative political parties.
NOUN► line· Grainne is Dierdriu's granddaughter by an unbroken line.· The premise of her nocturnes is that they need to be performed with a beautiful sound and a flexible, unbroken line.· Shell's large deep-sea tankers have been named after shells in an unbroken line since the launching of the Murex in 1892.· It was a radical departure from the past, an interlude of democracy in an otherwise unbroken line of authoritarian rule.· White should either flow in an unbroken line from the shoulder to the ground or be superbly cut and tailored.
nounbreakoutbreakbreakageadjectivebreakable ≠ unbreakablebroken ≠ unbrokenverbbreak