In France, in 1898, unmarried women engaged in commerce (including market women, etc.
Some criticism has been directed at the St. Helens Hospitals because they are not freely open to unmarried women, but it is only right that the position should be made clear.
In regard to the maternity homes which deal with unmarried women, there has also been some criticism of the usual regulations in these homes which call for a period of residence in the home both before and, especially, after confinement.
With regard to abortifacients, the recommendations we later make apply with even greater force to unmarried women.
Unmarried women, widows, and divorced women, provided they submitted to the necessary conditions, were given the municipal vote in 1873.
The pamphlet, speaking of unmarried women, also says-- Rights of Unmarried Women enlarged.
Unmarried women--earning their livings--it's the hardest life of all.
All the most individual and humane of his friends were bachelors and spinsters; indeed he was surprised to find that the women he most admired and knew best were unmarried women.
The term "spinster," which is now confined to unmarried women, was a term of consideration applied to all women of the better class during the Middle Ages.
In Norway, a law of the year 1888, on the administration of the property of married persons, provides that a married woman has the same power to dispose of her property as unmarried women, only the law specifies a few exceptions.
The number of unmarried women is even still larger, because a large number of men prefer, for all sorts of reasons, to remain single.
In Scotland, the number of unmarried women of the age of twenty years and over was, towards the close of the sixties, 43 per cent.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "unmarried women" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.