How to Use untrammeled in a Sentence

untrammeled

adjective
  • And its coast offers untrammeled access to both the east and north.
    Eric Berger, Ars Technica, 20 July 2018
  • Its vast forests and waterways provide recreation and respite — a place to bask in the beauty of untrammeled nature.
    Mark Dayton, Star Tribune, 9 Mar. 2021
  • In some areas, where the plovers have quiet, untrammeled beaches to nest on, the effort has been successful.
    John Myers, Twin Cities, 29 Apr. 2017
  • Now Bradlee’s vision of the press as the check on untrammeled government power seems more threatened than ever.
    Daniel D'addario, Time, 5 Jan. 2018
  • Some loathe the new possibilities and call for restrictions or bans; others claim untrammeled rights to the new thing.
    Jason Pontin, WIRED, 27 Mar. 2018
  • Critics, however, worry that the plant would grow untrammeled, like a weed gone wild, and would consume whole forests and wipe out native foliage.
    Smriti Rao, Discover Magazine, 1 Feb. 2010
  • Water was still sloshing around in the Battery Tunnel when the advocates for Gotham unbound spoke up in favor of yet more untrammeled growth.
    Ted Steinberg, Discover Magazine, 25 Apr. 2014
  • In others, voters seem to crave places that promise untrammeled nature and heart-pounding thrills at every turn.
    Chloe Sachdev, Travel + Leisure, 8 Sep. 2021
  • Flipping through its pages I was filled with both wonder and sadness, for few reefs today possess such untrammeled beauty.
    Tim Flannery, The New York Review of Books, 4 Nov. 2021
  • But Musk has often adopted the moral high ground of untrammeled free speech in his justification for buying the platform.
    Bychristiaan Hetzner, Fortune, 21 June 2023
  • Xi Thought asserts that the party’s leadership must be untrammeled.
    Chun Han Wong, WSJ, 24 Oct. 2017
  • Today, Alaska remains one of the last frontiers for remote, untrammeled skiing, but is no longer a stranger to luxury.
    Jen Murphy, Robb Report, 3 Feb. 2024
  • Of course, the North American wilderness was never untrammeled.
    Boyce Upholt, Outside Online, 27 Mar. 2020
  • The best of these images, with their untrammeled dirtbag energy and their middle-aged melancholy, are expressive in a way that borders on the absurd.
    Alison Willmore, Vulture, 14 Oct. 2021
  • Taxation, parliaments, bond markets — all arose thanks to the untrammeled pursuit of war.
    Washington Post, 13 Nov. 2020
  • This was Mendocino utopia: a place on the edge of the continent, where nature at its most untrammeled is on display, and freedom seems absolute.
    Jody Rosen, Smithsonian, 14 June 2018
  • Mount Engadine is that rare find: a warm, intimate lodge surrounded by untrammeled peaks and trails, but only 45 minutes by car from Banff.
    Katie Arnold, Outside Online, 11 Apr. 2018
  • Another perk from its largely untrammeled slopes: A fresh-snow feeling and quality powder tend to stick around, even days after storm.
    Nina Kokotas Hahn, Condé Nast Traveler, 1 Dec. 2022
  • So there are reasons for optimism, conflicts to navigate and a lot of natural world still untrammeled.
    Sammy Rothstaff Writer, Los Angeles Times, 14 Apr. 2022
  • Along with the chance to unwind and explore more than 1,200 untrammeled acres, owners can hike trails, paddle canoes, view nature and try their clubwork on a Jack Nicklaus Signature golf course.
    Jeffrey Steele, Forbes, 25 July 2022
  • But this secularized and racialized version of the fatalist case for inaction in the face of untrammeled gun violence is also a right-wing fairy tale.
    Sarah Jones, New Republic, 9 Oct. 2017
  • People can still view the untrammeled gardens online, via Keukenhof Virtually Open, until the flowers bloom again next year.
    Nina Siegal, New York Times, 12 Apr. 2020
  • This, after all, involved two teams backed by the untrammeled wealth of Gulf States competing for a place in soccer’s most glamorous, most exclusive club competition.
    New York Times, 4 May 2021
  • The upshot is that relatively few people have easy access to miles and miles of untrammeled gravel (or a motor vehicle with which to travel to it), but pretty much everybody lives on or near a road.
    Eben Weiss, Outside Online, 2 June 2022
  • Campers venture out into the untrammeled waters for days without seeing another person or hearing anything but the soprano trill of a loon.
    Jack Brook, The Christian Science Monitor, 2 July 2020
  • Here, the untrammeled imagination presents itself not as a fount of invention but an instrument of oppression.
    James Campbell, WSJ, 19 Mar. 2021
  • For years, it’s been a tale of untrammeled success, with earnings, profits, and user numbers generally heading in one direction: up.
    Wired, 31 July 2022
  • The events of recent years — the data breaches, election influencing, and ensuing fraying of social fabrics — have demonstrated the cost of untrammeled growth.
    Alex Webb | Bloomberg, Washington Post, 14 Mar. 2019
  • While none of these changes will come to pass in the immediate future, and some may never materialize, the age of untrammeled crypto experimentation (and bald-faced crypto scams) might be on the way out.
    Wired, 6 July 2022
  • Instead of allowing fires to spread untrammeled on grasslands, Trauernicht recommends planting rows of pineapples, bananas, dragon fruit or taro to cut off a fire’s potential path of spread.
    Shi En Kim, Smithsonian Magazine, 15 Aug. 2023

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'untrammeled.' 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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