Uninhabited
Uninhabited describes a place or area that has no permanent human population. A location may be labeled uninhabited when it has no residents or households, though it can host temporary or seasonal occupancy by researchers, explorers, or transient visitors without forming a permanent community. The term is widely used in geography, cartography, and land administration to distinguish places with permanent settlement from those without.
Etymology: uninhabited is formed from the negative prefix un- and the adjective inhabited, from Latin habitare.
Uninhabited does not imply physical impossibility of living. An area may be uninhabited due to isolation, extreme
Examples include remote islands, deserts, high mountain regions, and polar areas. In maps and official records,
Overall, uninhabited is a status describing population density rather than suitability for habitation, and it can
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