different between seatless vs seamless

seatless

English

Etymology

seat +? -less

Adjective

seatless (not comparable)

  1. Lacking a seat.
    • August 17, 1890, George Bernard Shaw, letter to William Archer
      We were much disheartened when we arrived and found ourselves in the middle of a lamenting, seatless, lodgingless horde of English and American trippers []
    • 1970, William Furber, Make Love, Not Water (page 141)
      My companions rose one by one and emptied their nocturnal accumulations of urine into the seatless toilet.

Anagrams

  • sateless

seatless From the web:

  • what does seamless mean
  • what does seatless
  • what is a seatless valve
  • what is seamless mean
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seamless

English

Etymology

From Middle English seemles, semeles, semles, Old English *s?aml?as, equivalent to seam +? -less. Cognate with Norwegian Bokmål sømløs (seamless), Swedish sömlös (seamless).

Adjective

seamless (not comparable)

  1. (not comparable) Having no seams.
  2. Without interruption; coherent
    a seamless transition

Derived terms

Translations

Anagrams

  • almesses, melasses

seamless From the web:

  • what seamless means
  • what seamlessly integrates related files
  • what's seamless leggings
  • what's seamless underwear
  • what's seamless gutters
  • what's seamless plus
  • what seamless pipe
  • what seamless means in spanish
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