Words that rhyme with heartless
-
accomplice
n 1: a person who joins with another in carrying out some plan (especially an unethical or illegal plan) [syn: accomplice, confederate] -
altocumulus
n 1: a cumulus cloud at an intermediate altitude of 2 or 3 miles [syn: altocumulus, altocumulus cloud] -
annulus
n 1: a toroidal shape; "a ring of ships in the harbor"; "a halo of smoke" [syn: ring, halo, annulus, doughnut, anchor ring] 2: (Fungi) a remnant of the partial veil that in mature mushrooms surrounds the stem like a collar [syn: annulus, skirt] -
artless
adj 1: characterized by an inability to mask your feelings; not devious; "an ingenuous admission of responsibility" [syn: ingenuous, artless] [ant: artful, disingenuous] 2: simple and natural; without cunning or deceit; "an artless manner"; "artless elegance" [ant: artful] 3: showing lack of art; "an artless translation" 4: (of persons) lacking art or knowledge [syn: artless, uncultivated, uncultured] -
atlas
n 1: (Greek mythology) a Titan who was forced by Zeus to bear the sky on his shoulders 2: a collection of maps in book form [syn: atlas, book of maps, map collection] 3: the 1st cervical vertebra [syn: atlas, atlas vertebra] 4: a figure of a man used as a supporting column [syn: atlas, telamon] -
bibulous
adj 1: given to or marked by the consumption of alcohol; "a bibulous fellow"; "a bibulous evening"; "his boozy drinking companions"; "thick boozy singing"; "a drunken binge"; "two drunken gentlemen holding each other up"; "sottish behavior" [syn: bibulous, boozy, drunken, sottish] -
bolus
n 1: a small round soft mass (as of chewed food) 2: a large pill; used especially in veterinary medicine -
bootless
adj 1: unproductive of success; "a fruitless search"; "futile years after her artistic peak"; "a sleeveless errand"; "a vain attempt" [syn: bootless, fruitless, futile, sleeveless, vain] -
calculus
n 1: a hard lump produced by the concretion of mineral salts; found in hollow organs or ducts of the body; "renal calculi can be very painful" [syn: calculus, concretion] 2: an incrustation that forms on the teeth and gums [syn: tartar, calculus, tophus] 3: the branch of mathematics that is concerned with limits and with the differentiation and integration of functions [syn: calculus, infinitesimal calculus] -
cirrocumulus
n 1: a cloud at a high altitude consisting of a series of regularly arranged small clouds resembling ripples [syn: cirrocumulus, cirrocumulus cloud] -
collarless
adj 1: without a collar -
colourless
adj 1: lacking in variety and interest; "a colorless and unimaginative person"; "a colorless description of the parade" [syn: colorless, colourless] [ant: colorful, colourful] 2: weak in color; not colorful [syn: colorless, colourless] [ant: colorful, colourful] -
comfortless
adj 1: without comfort; "a comfortless room" -
cumulous
adj 1: thrown together in a pile; "a desk heaped with books"; "heaped-up ears of corn"; "ungraded papers piled high" -
cumulus
n 1: a globular cloud [syn: cumulus, cumulus cloud] 2: a collection of objects laid on top of each other [syn: pile, heap, mound, agglomerate, cumulation, cumulus] -
cutlass
n 1: a short heavy curved sword with one edge; formerly used by sailors [syn: cutlas, cutlass] -
darkness
n 1: absence of light or illumination [syn: dark, darkness] [ant: light, lighting] 2: an unilluminated area; "he moved off into the darkness" [syn: darkness, dark, shadow] 3: absence of moral or spiritual values; "the powers of darkness" [syn: iniquity, wickedness, darkness, dark] 4: an unenlightened state; "he was in the dark concerning their intentions"; "his lectures dispelled the darkness" [syn: dark, darkness] 5: having a dark or somber color [ant: lightness] 6: a swarthy complexion [syn: darkness, duskiness, swarthiness] -
dateless
adj 1: having no known beginning and presumably no end; "the dateless rise and fall of the tides"; "time is endless"; "sempiternal truth" [syn: dateless, endless, sempiternal] 2: of such great duration as to preclude the possibility of being assigned a date; "dateless customs" 3: not bearing a date; "a dateless letter" [syn: dateless, undated] 4: unaffected by time; "few characters are so dateless as Hamlet"; "Helen's timeless beauty" [syn: dateless, timeless] -
doubtless
adv 1: without doubt; certainly; "it's undoubtedly very beautiful" [syn: undoubtedly, doubtless, doubtlessly] -
effortless
adj 1: requiring or apparently requiring no effort; "the swallows glided in an effortless way through the busy air" [ant: effortful] 2: not showing effort or strain; "a difficult feat performed with casual mastery"; "careless grace" [syn: casual, effortless] -
emulous
adj 1: characterized by or arising from emulation or imitation 2: eager to surpass others [syn: emulous, rivalrous] -
fabulous
adj 1: extremely pleasing; "a fabulous vacation" [syn: fabulous, fab] 2: based on or told of in traditional stories; lacking factual basis or historical validity; "mythical centaurs"; "the fabulous unicorn" [syn: fabulous, mythic, mythical, mythologic, mythological] 3: barely credible; "the fabulous endurance of a marathon runner" -
fineness
n 1: the quality of being very good indeed; "the inn is distinguished by the fineness of its cuisine" [syn: fineness, choiceness] 2: the property of being very narrow or thin; "he marvelled at the fineness of her hair" [syn: fineness, thinness] 3: having a very fine texture; "the fineness of the sand on the beach" [syn: fineness, powderiness] 4: the quality of being beautiful and delicate in appearance; "the daintiness of her touch"; "the fineness of her features" [syn: daintiness, delicacy, fineness] -
firmness
n 1: the muscle tone of healthy tissue; "his muscular firmness" [syn: firmness, soundness] [ant: unsoundness] 2: the trait of being resolute; "his resoluteness carried him through the battle"; "it was his unshakeable resolution to finish the work" [syn: resoluteness, firmness, firmness of purpose, resolve, resolution] [ant: irresoluteness, irresolution] 3: the property of being unyielding to the touch 4: the quality of being steady or securely and immovably fixed in place [syn: steadiness, firmness] [ant: ricketiness, unsteadiness] -
flightless
adj 1: incapable of flying -
fondness
n 1: a predisposition to like something; "he had a fondness for whiskey" [syn: fondness, fancy, partiality] 2: a positive feeling of liking; "he had trouble expressing the affection he felt"; "the child won everyone's heart"; "the warmness of his welcome made us feel right at home" [syn: affection, affectionateness, fondness, tenderness, heart, warmness, warmheartedness, philia] 3: a quality proceeding from feelings of affection or love [syn: affectionateness, fondness, lovingness, warmth] -
footless
adj 1: having no feet or analogous appendages [ant: footed] -
frankness
n 1: the quality of being honest and straightforward in attitude and speech [syn: candor, candour, candidness, frankness, directness, forthrightness] 2: the trait of being blunt and outspoken [syn: frankness, outspokenness] -
fruitless
adj 1: unproductive of success; "a fruitless search"; "futile years after her artistic peak"; "a sleeveless errand"; "a vain attempt" [syn: bootless, fruitless, futile, sleeveless, vain] -
gameness
n 1: disability of walking due to crippling of the legs or feet [syn: lameness, limping, gimp, gimpiness, gameness, claudication] -
gladiolus
n 1: any of numerous plants of the genus Gladiolus native chiefly to tropical and South Africa having sword-shaped leaves and one-sided spikes of brightly colored funnel- shaped flowers; widely cultivated [syn: gladiolus, gladiola, glad, sword lily] 2: the large central part of the breastbone [syn: gladiolus, corpus sternum] -
glumness
n 1: an atmosphere of depression and melancholy; "gloom pervaded the office" [syn: gloom, gloominess, glumness] 2: a gloomy ill-tempered feeling [syn: moroseness, glumness, sullenness] -
grandness
n 1: a prominent status; "a person of importance" [syn: importance, grandness] 2: unusual largeness in size or extent or number [syn: enormousness, grandness, greatness, immenseness, immensity, sizeableness, vastness, wideness] 3: the quality of being magnificent or splendid or grand; "for magnificence and personal service there is the Queen's hotel"; "his `Hamlet' lacks the brilliance that one expects"; "it is the university that gives the scene its stately splendor"; "an imaginative mix of old-fashioned grandeur and colorful art"; "advertisers capitalize on the grandness and elegance it brings to their products" [syn: magnificence, brilliance, splendor, splendour, grandeur, grandness] 4: splendid or imposing in size or appearance; "the grandness of the architecture"; "impressed by the richness of the flora" [syn: impressiveness, grandness, magnificence, richness] -
greenness
n 1: the lush appearance of flourishing vegetation [syn: greenness, verdancy, verdure] 2: the state of not being ripe [ant: ripeness] 3: green color or pigment; resembling the color of growing grass [syn: green, greenness, viridity] -
grimness
n 1: the quality of being ghastly [syn: ghastliness, grimness, gruesomeness, luridness] 2: something hard to endure; "the asperity of northern winters" [syn: asperity, grimness, hardship, rigor, rigour, severity, severeness, rigorousness, rigourousness] -
gutless
adj 1: lacking courage or vitality; "he was a yellow gutless worm"; "a spineless craven fellow" [ant: gutsy, plucky] 2: weak in willpower, courage or vitality [syn: namby-pamby, gutless, spineless, wishy-washy] -
hapless
adj 1: deserving or inciting pity; "a hapless victim"; "miserable victims of war"; "the shabby room struck her as extraordinarily pathetic"- Galsworthy; "piteous appeals for help"; "pitiable homeless children"; "a pitiful fate"; "Oh, you poor thing"; "his poor distorted limbs"; "a wretched life" [syn: hapless, miserable, misfortunate, pathetic, piteous, pitiable, pitiful, poor, wretched] -
hatless
adj 1: not wearing a hat; "stood hatless in the rain with water dripping down his neck" [ant: hatted] -
helpless
adj 1: lacking in or deprived of strength or power; "lying ill and helpless"; "helpless with laughter" [syn: helpless, incapacitated] 2: unable to function; without help [syn: helpless, lost] 3: unable to manage independently; "as helpless as a baby" -
homunculus
n 1: a person who is very small but who is not otherwise deformed or abnormal [syn: manikin, mannikin, homunculus] 2: a tiny fully formed individual that (according to the discredited theory of preformation) is supposed to be present in the sperm cell -
hopeless
adj 1: without hope because there seems to be no possibility of comfort or success; "in an agony of hopeless grief"; "with a hopeless sigh he sat down" [ant: hopeful] 2: of a person unable to do something skillfully; "I'm hopeless at mathematics" 3: certain to fail; "the situation is hopeless" 4: (informal to emphasize how bad it is) beyond hope of management or reform; "she handed me a hopeless jumble of papers"; "he is a hopeless romantic" -
jobless
adj 1: not having a job; "idle carpenters"; "jobless transients"; "many people in the area were out of work" [syn: idle, jobless, out of work] -
keenness
n 1: a quick and penetrating intelligence; "he argued with great acuteness"; "I admired the keenness of his mind" [syn: acuteness, acuity, sharpness, keenness] 2: a positive feeling of wanting to push ahead with something [syn: eagerness, avidity, avidness, keenness] 3: thinness of edge or fineness of point [syn: sharpness, keenness] [ant: bluntness, dullness] -
kindness
n 1: the quality of being warmhearted and considerate and humane and sympathetic [ant: unkindness] 2: tendency to be kind and forgiving [syn: forgivingness, kindness] 3: a kind act [syn: kindness, benignity] -
leanness
n 1: the quality of being meager; "an exiguity of cloth that would only allow of miniature capes"-George Eliot [syn: meagerness, meagreness, leanness, poorness, scantiness, scantness, exiguity] 2: the property of having little body fat [syn: leanness, thinness, spareness] [ant: avoirdupois, blubber, fat, fatness] -
lightless
adj 1: giving no light; "lightless stars `visible' only to radio antennae" 2: without illumination; "came up the lightless stairs"; "the unilluminated side of Mars"; "through dark unlighted (or unlit) streets" [syn: lightless, unilluminated, unlighted, unlit] -
likeness
n 1: similarity in appearance or character or nature between persons or things; "man created God in his own likeness" [syn: likeness, alikeness, similitude] [ant: dissimilitude, unlikeness] 2: picture consisting of a graphic image of a person or thing [syn: likeness, semblance] -
limitless
adj 1: without limits in extent or size or quantity; "limitless vastness of our solar system" [syn: illimitable, limitless, measureless] 2: having no limits in range or scope; "to start with a theory of unlimited freedom is to end up with unlimited despotism"- Philip Rahv; "the limitless reaches of outer space" [syn: unlimited, limitless] [ant: limited] 3: seemingly boundless in amount, number, degree, or especially extent; "unbounded enthusiasm"; "children with boundless energy"; "a limitless supply of money" [syn: boundless, unbounded, limitless] -
limulus
n 1: type genus of the family Limulidae [syn: Limulus, genus Limulus] -
meekness
n 1: the feeling of patient, submissive humbleness [syn: meekness, submission] 2: a disposition to be patient and long suffering [syn: meekness, subduedness] -
meticulous
adj 1: marked by precise accordance with details; "meticulous research"; "punctilious in his attention to rules of etiquette" [syn: meticulous, punctilious] 2: marked by extreme care in treatment of details; "a meticulous craftsman"; "almost worryingly meticulous in his business formalities" -
mildness
n 1: good weather with comfortable temperatures [syn: mildness, clemency] 2: acting in a manner that is gentle and mild and even-tempered; "his fingers have learned gentleness"; "suddenly her gigantic power melted into softness for the baby"; "even in the pulpit there are moments when mildness of manner is not enough" [syn: gentleness, softness, mildness] 3: mercifulness as a consequence of being lenient or tolerant [syn: lenience, leniency, mildness, lenity] -
miraculous
adj 1: being or having the character of a miracle [syn: marvelous, marvellous, miraculous] 2: peculiarly fortunate or appropriate; as if by divine intervention; "a heaven-sent rain saved the crops"; "a providential recovery" [syn: heaven-sent, providential, miraculous] -
nebulous
adj 1: lacking definite form or limits; "gropes among cloudy issues toward a feeble conclusion"- H.T.Moore; "nebulous distinction between pride and conceit" [syn: cloudy, nebulose, nebulous] 2: of or relating to or resembling a nebula; "the nebular hypothesis of the origin of the solar system" [syn: nebular, nebulous] 3: lacking definition or definite content; "nebulous reasons"; "unfixed as were her general notions of what men ought to be"- Jane Austen [syn: nebulous, unfixed] -
profitless
adj 1: without profit or reward; "let us have no part in profitless quarrels"- D.D.Eisenhower; "How weary, flat, stale, and unprofitable / Seem to me all the uses of this world"- Shakespeare -
regardless
adv 1: in spite of everything; without regard to drawbacks; "he carried on regardless of the difficulties" [syn: regardless, irrespective, disregardless, no matter, disregarding] adj 1: (usually followed by `of') without due thought or consideration; "careless of the consequences"; "crushing the blooms with regardless tread" [syn: careless(p), regardless] -
ridiculous
adj 1: inspiring scornful pity; "how silly an ardent and unsuccessful wooer can be especially if he is getting on in years"- Dashiell Hammett [syn: pathetic, ridiculous, silly] 2: incongruous;inviting ridicule; "the absurd excuse that the dog ate his homework"; "that's a cockeyed idea"; "ask a nonsensical question and get a nonsensical answer"; "a contribution so small as to be laughable"; "it is ludicrous to call a cottage a mansion"; "a preposterous attempt to turn back the pages of history"; "her conceited assumption of universal interest in her rather dull children was ridiculous" [syn: absurd, cockeyed, derisory, idiotic, laughable, ludicrous, nonsensical, preposterous, ridiculous] 3: broadly or extravagantly humorous; resembling farce; "the wild farcical exuberance of a clown"; "ludicrous green hair" [syn: farcical, ludicrous, ridiculous] -
rootless
adj 1: wandering aimlessly without ties to a place or community; "led a vagabond life"; "a rootless wanderer" [syn: rootless, vagabond] -
roundness
n 1: the fullness of a tone of voice; "there is a musky roundness to his wordiness" [syn: roundness, rotundity] 2: the quality of being round numbers; "he gave us the results in round numbers, but their roundness didn't affect the point he was making" 3: the property possessed by a line or surface that is curved and not angular [ant: angularity] 4: the bodily property of being well rounded [syn: plumpness, embonpoint, roundness] -
sapless
adj 1: lacking bodily or muscular strength or vitality; "a feeble old woman"; "her body looked sapless" [syn: decrepit, debile, feeble, infirm, rickety, sapless, weak, weakly] 2: destitute of sap and other vital juices; dry; "the rats and roaches scurrying along the sapless planks"- Norman Mailer -
scrofulous
adj 1: afflicted with scrofula 2: morally contaminated; "denounce the scrofulous wealth of the times"- J.D.Hart 3: having a diseased appearance resembling scrofula; "our canoe...lay with her scrofulous sides on the shore"- Farley Mowat -
scrupulous
adj 1: having scruples; arising from a sense of right and wrong; principled; "less scrupulous producers sent bundles that were deceptive in appearance" [ant: unscrupulous] 2: characterized by extreme care and great effort; "conscientious application to the work at hand"; "painstaking research"; "scrupulous attention to details" [syn: conscientious, painstaking, scrupulous] -
shapeless
adj 1: having no definite form or distinct shape; "amorphous clouds of insects"; "an aggregate of formless particles"; "a shapeless mass of protoplasm" [syn: amorphous, formless, shapeless] 2: lacking symmetry or attractive form; "a shapeless hat on his head" -
sightless
adj 1: lacking sight; "blind as an eyeless beggar" [syn: eyeless, sightless, unseeing] -
sleepless
adj 1: experiencing or accompanied by sleeplessness; "insomniac old people"; "insomniac nights"; "lay sleepless all night"; "twenty watchful, weary, tedious nights"- Shakespeare [syn: insomniac, sleepless, watchful] 2: always watchful; "to an eye like mine, a lidless watcher of the public weal"- Alfred Tennyson [syn: lidless, sleepless] -
soundness
n 1: a state or condition free from damage or decay [ant: unsoundness] 2: the quality of being prudent and sensible [syn: wisdom, wiseness, soundness] [ant: unsoundness] 3: the muscle tone of healthy tissue; "his muscular firmness" [syn: firmness, soundness] [ant: unsoundness] -
spiritless
adj 1: lacking ardor or vigor or energy; "a spiritless reply to criticism" [ant: spirited] 2: evidencing little spirit or courage; overly submissive or compliant; "compliant and anxious to suit his opinions of those of others"; "a fine fiery blast against meek conformity"- Orville Prescott; "she looked meek but had the heart of a lion"; "was submissive and subservient" [syn: meek, spiritless] -
spotless
adj 1: completely neat and clean; "the apartment was immaculate"; "in her immaculate white uniform"; "a spick- and-span kitchen"; "their spic red-visored caps" [syn: immaculate, speckless, spick-and-span, spic-and- span, spic, spick, spotless] -
starkness
n 1: the quality of being complete or utter or extreme; "the starkness of his contrast between justice and fairness was open to many objections" [syn: starkness, absoluteness, utterness] 2: an extreme lack of furnishings or ornamentation; "I was struck by the starkness of my father's room" [syn: bareness, starkness] -
sternness
n 1: the quality (as of scenery) being grim and gloomy and forbidding; "the sternness of his surroundings made him uncomfortable" 2: uncompromising resolution [syn: sternness, strictness] -
stiffness
n 1: the physical property of being inflexible and hard to bend 2: the property of moving with pain or difficulty; "he awoke with a painful stiffness in his neck" 3: firm resoluteness in purpose or opinion or action; "a charming host without any touch of stiffness or pomposity" 4: the inelegance of someone stiff and unrelaxed (as by embarrassment) [syn: awkwardness, clumsiness, gracelessness, stiffness] 5: excessive sternness; "severity of character"; "the harshness of his punishment was inhuman"; "the rigors of boot camp" [syn: severity, severeness, harshness, rigor, rigour, rigorousness, rigourousness, inclemency, hardness, stiffness] -
stimulus
n 1: any stimulating information or event; acts to arouse action [syn: stimulation, stimulus, stimulant, input] -
strapless
adj 1: having no straps; "a strapless evening gown" n 1: a woman's garment that exposes the shoulders and has no shoulder straps -
surplice
n 1: a loose-fitting white ecclesiastical vestment with wide sleeves -
surplus
adj 1: more than is needed, desired, or required; "trying to lose excess weight"; "found some extra change lying on the dresser"; "yet another book on heraldry might be thought redundant"; "skills made redundant by technological advance"; "sleeping in the spare room"; "supernumerary ornamentation"; "it was supererogatory of her to gloat"; "delete superfluous (or unnecessary) words"; "extra ribs as well as other supernumerary internal parts"; "surplus cheese distributed to the needy" [syn: excess, extra, redundant, spare, supererogatory, superfluous, supernumerary, surplus] n 1: a quantity much larger than is needed [syn: excess, surplus, surplusage, nimiety] -
tameness
n 1: the quality of being vapid and unsophisticated [syn: jejunity, jejuneness, tameness, vapidity, vapidness] 2: the attribute of having been domesticated [syn: tameness, domestication] [ant: wildness] -
thickness
n 1: the dimension through an object as opposed to its length or width [ant: slenderness, tenuity, thinness] 2: indistinct articulation; "judging from the thickness of his speech he had been drinking heavily" 3: used of a line or mark [syn: thickness, heaviness] 4: resistance to flow [ant: thinness] -
thoughtless
adj 1: showing lack of careful thought; "the debate turned into thoughtless bickering" [ant: thoughtful] 2: without care or thought for others; "the thoughtless saying of a great princess on being informed that the people had no bread; `Let them eat cake'" [syn: thoughtless, uncaring, unthinking] -
toeless
adj 1: lacking a toe or toes; "a toeless shoe" [ant: toed] -
topless
adj 1: having no top; "a topless jar" [ant: topped] 2: having the breasts uncovered or featuring such nudity; "topless waitresses"; "a topless cabaret" [syn: bare- breasted, braless, topless] -
toughness
n 1: enduring strength and energy [syn: stamina, staying power, toughness] 2: the property of being big and strong [syn: huskiness, ruggedness, toughness] 3: the elasticity and hardness of a metal object; its ability to absorb considerable energy before cracking [syn: temper, toughness] 4: impressive difficulty [syn: formidability, toughness] -
tremulous
adj 1: (of the voice) quivering as from weakness or fear; "the old lady's quavering voice"; "spoke timidly in a tremulous voice" [syn: quavering, tremulous] -
trimness
n 1: a state of arrangement or appearance; "in good trim" [syn: trim, trimness] -
tubeless
adj 1: of a tire; not needing an inner tube [ant: tubed] n 1: pneumatic tire not needing an inner tube to be airtight [syn: tubeless, tubeless tire] -
tumulus
n 1: (archeology) a heap of earth placed over prehistoric tombs [syn: burial mound, grave mound, barrow, tumulus] -
unscrupulous
adj 1: without scruples or principles; "unscrupulous politicos who would be happy to sell...their country in order to gain power" [ant: scrupulous] -
vagueness
n 1: unclearness by virtue of being poorly expressed or not coherent in meaning; "the Conservative manifesto is a model of vagueness"; "these terms were used with a vagueness that suggested little or no thought about what each might convey" 2: indistinctness of shape or character; "the scene had the swirling vagueness of a painting by Turner" -
weakness
n 1: a flaw or weak point; "he was quick to point out his wife's failings" [syn: failing, weakness] 2: powerlessness revealed by an inability to act; "in spite of their weakness the group remains active" [syn: helplessness, weakness, impuissance] 3: the property of lacking physical or mental strength; liability to failure under pressure or stress or strain; "his weakness increased as he became older"; "the weakness of the span was overlooked until it collapsed" [ant: strength] 4: the condition of being financially weak; "the weakness of the dollar against the yen" [ant: strength] 5: a penchant for something even though it might not be good for you; "he has a weakness for chocolate" -
weightless
adj 1: having little or no weight or apparent gravitational pull; light; "floating freely in a weightless condition"; "a baby bat...fluffy and weightless as a moth"; "jackets made of a weightless polyester fabric" [ant: weighty] -
wildness
n 1: a feeling of extreme emotional intensity; "the wildness of his anger" [syn: wildness, abandon] 2: the property of being wild or turbulent; "the storm's violence" [syn: ferocity, fierceness, furiousness, fury, vehemence, violence, wildness] 3: an unruly disposition to do as one pleases; "Liza had always had a tendency to wildness"; "the element of wildness in his behavior was a protest against repressive convention" 4: an intractably barbarous or uncultivated state of nature [ant: domestication, tameness] -
witless
adj 1: (of especially persons) lacking sense or understanding or judgment [syn: nitwitted, senseless, soft-witted, witless] -
meatless
adj 1: lacking meat; "meatless days" [ant: meaty] -
troublous
adj 1: full of trouble; "these are troublous times" -
mateless
adj 1: not mated sexually 2: of someone who has no marriage partner -
famulus
n 1: a close attendant (as to a scholar) -
fasciculus
n 1: a bundle of fibers (especially nerve fibers) [syn: fiber bundle, fibre bundle, fascicle, fasciculus] -
funiculus
n 1: the stalk of a plant ovule or seed [syn: funicle, funiculus] 2: any of several body structure resembling a cord -
pilotless
adj 1: lacking a pilot; "a drone is a pilotless aircraft" -
romulus
n 1: (Roman mythology) founder of Rome; suckled with his twin brother Remus by a wolf after their parents (Mars and Rhea Silvia) abandoned them; Romulus killed Remus in an argument over the building of Rome -
calculous
adj 1: relating to or caused by or having a calculus or calculi
See also heartless definition and heartless synonyms
