Citations:unborns

Noun: "plural form of unborn"

 * 2000 — Laura Schlessinger, Stupid Things Parents Do to Mess Up Their Kids, Quill (2002), ISBN 0060933798, page 136:
 * With abortion a mainstay of women's reproductive 'health,' undesirable unborns are not considered human.
 * 2003 — Marlene Targ Brill, Raising Smart Kids for Dummies, Wiley Publishing, Inc. (2003), ISBN 0764517651, unnumbered page:
 * Hence the term, Mozart Effect and the rather new emphasis on playing classical music to unborns.
 * 2004 — Randy Alcorn, Why Pro-Life?: Caring for the Unborn and Their Mothers, Hendrickson Publishers Marketing, LLC (2004), ISBN 9781598569001, page 22:
 * This proves they do not believe unborns are human beings in the same sense they believe three-year-olds are human beings.
 * 2005 — Mary J. Shoman, Living Well with Graves' Disease and Hyperthyroidism: What Your Doctor Doesn't Tell You… That You Need to Know, HarperCollins (2005), ISBN 9780060730192, page 133:
 * It is not known whether propranolol is dangerous to unborns, but some beta blockers during pregnancy have been linked to breathing problems, a slowed heart rate, and lowered blood pressure in newborns.
 * 2007 — Alan Greene (with Jeanette Pavini & Theresa Foy DiGeronimo), Raising Baby Green: The Earth-Friendly Guide to Pregnancy, Childbirth, and Baby Care, Jossey-Bass (2007), ISBN 9780787996222, page 149:
 * Nitrates are rarely a problem for humans after the age of six months but this toxin can be dangerous for unborns and newborns.
 * 2007 — Stephen Lyn Bales, Natural Histories: Stories from the Tennessee Valley, University of Tennessee Press (2007), ISBN 9781572335615, page 171:
 * Placental mothers have to carry their unborns to full term.
 * 2009 — Catherine Playoust & Ellen Bradshaw Aitken, "The Leaping Child: Imagining the Unborn in Early Christian Literature", in Imagining the Fetus: The Unborn in Myth, Religion, and Culture (eds. Vanessa R. Sasson & Jane Marie Law), Oxford University Press (2009), ISBN 9780195380040, page 161:
 * It is no accident that these narratives about special unborns had such force: they were designed to act that way on their initial audience.
 * 2010 — Ryan Knighton, C'Mon Papa: Dispatches from a Dad in the Dark, Knopf Canada (2010), ISBN 9780307396693, page 125:
 * It's not like we'd blasted this stuff at Tracy's pregnant belly, the way some parents assault their unborns with Mozart.