With 4,000 deaths in West Africa, the number of forsaken children is exploding.
Global Cures calls these forsaken therapies “financial orphans.”
Her departure from music left her fans bereft: "Why has she forsaken us?"
Ron Paul shares her fears that the dollar will be forsaken in favor of some cursed one-world currency.
Only one belonging to a forsaken people or a forgotten cause can know the value of her flag pinned to his highly-visible lapel.
He at least did not think that the idol had been forsaken because the use of his name was given up.
Far below him lay the pallidly-lit depths of the forsaken thoroughfare.
Since Salvat's arrest, the woman and the child had been forsaken and suspected by one and all.
Grey Beaver had betrayed and forsaken him, but that had no effect upon him.
Tell him also that if he had paid me a little better for my labours, I would not have forsaken him.
mid-13c., past participle adjective from forsake. Related: Forsakenly.
Old English forsacan "object to, decline, oppose, refuse, deny," from for- "completely" + sacan "to deny, refuse" (see sake). Related: Forsaking.