Yes.
Shock is a noun and a verb. Noun: She was in shock when her unattended car rolled down the hill and crashed into a house. Verb: Your actions shock me.
Notwithstanding is a word that means "regardless of," and can be used in a sentence as a conjunction. An example of this would be, "First of all, there was no way he could leave the baby unattended, notwithstanding that he had a pot on the stove as well."
They may be striving to lay claim to that unattended quarter on the sidewalk. They might be trying to get the larger piece of shade on the sidewalk, if it is summertime. They be be experiencing a clash of the titanic egos.
No,it is not a real word dove is a word but doved is not a word.
"Word for word" means copied exactly. If you repeat something word for word, you repeat everything perfectly.
The chair was left unattended.
virginity
The prefix word for "not attended" is "unattended."
That unattended piece of chocolate cake is quite a temptation.
No, it is not safe to leave a fire unattended.
No, it is not safe to leave a fire pit unattended.
The detective analyzed the skeletal remains found at the crime scene.
"The body had been left too long unattended in the hot apartment, and had decayed considerably."
His health had deteriorated while he was in prison.
well defended
No, it is not safe to leave a 4-year-old child unattended in the bath.
No, it is not safe to leave food unattended when there is a bear outside the tent.