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Examples

  • Nor she in mine, painted black and furnitureless except for a mattress, a kitchen table, a bookshelf stuffed with everything but books, and a locked metal box with two vials of battery acid inside.

    Supernova Nicholas Rombes 2010

  • Once there, I would climb out on the roof of my furnitureless rented house, and perch there with my housemate (who also worked there), and we would drink the soup, usually directly from the container.

    Tigers & Strawberries » Soup to Raise the Dead 2005

  • She pranced like a pixilated faun down the center hall, passing clean, furnitureless rooms on either side.

    Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine 2003

  • She pranced like a pixilated faun down the center hall, passing clean, furnitureless rooms on either side.

    Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine 2003

  • I had to burn off the faux energy so I started to pace around the edges of the furnitureless dance studio.

    Gingerbread Rachel Cohn 2002

  • I had to burn off the faux energy so I started to pace around the edges of the furnitureless dance studio.

    Gingerbread Rachel Cohn 2002

  • They had been laughing a little over the absurdity of their situation; the tailor's missus had removed the bed and chair from Mademoiselle's room, and they were furnitureless.

    Little Miss By-The-Day Lucille Van Slyke

  • "Get some water heated," said I; and the wretchedness of our bedless bed and furnitureless room crossed my mind at the same time.

    Select Temperance Tracts American Tract Society

  • Boston, etc., -- namely that he was n't known, -- and my heart was heavy in my breast that so rich a nature, fitted to inhabit a tropical dreamland, should have nothing but that furnitureless cabin within and snow and sky without to live upon.

    Familiar Letters of William James I 1920

  • We would either have to spend the night curled up among coils of rope, with no shelter except a windowless, furnitureless cupboard of four feet by three, which maybe called itself a cabin, or we would have to crawl humbly back to the inn and sue for a night's lodging.

    The Chauffeur and the Chaperon Karl Anderson 1901

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