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Words that sound like "effortless" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(adj)
Without effort.
Relevance: 0%
Having or displaying no guile, cunning, or deceit.
(n)
The work involved in performing an activity; exertion.
(adv)
Without effort; without difficulty or struggle.
Lacking or being without air.
Without feeling, emotion, or concern for others; uncaring; cruel.
(chiefly of a male) Not wearing a shirt; having a bare torso, barechested
A surname.
Not causing hurt; harmless.
Not mapped; uncharted; vague.
Without an heir.
Lacking ears.
Of a thing: offering no comfort; uncomforting.
(not comparable) Free from errors; accurate, correct.
Lacking or not showing emotion.
In an effete manner.
A bound collection of maps often including tables, illustrations or other text.
Conveyed without the use of words; unspoken or unsaid.
Having no cord; especially using batteries instead of mains electricity.
Having no effect or advantage.
Without a lord.
(anatomy) The great artery which carries the blood from the heart to all parts of the body except the lungs; the main trunk of the arterial system.
Without a sword.
Lazy, unmotivated.
(v)
(intransitive, of a liquid) To emit small bubbles of dissolved gas; to froth or fizz.
ungifted, untalented
Having no feathers.
Without feet.
Having no end.
Not giving sufficient attention or thought, especially concerning the avoidance of harm or mistakes.
Dangerous, full of peril.
(figuratively) Unproductive, useless.
A woman who has a right of inheritance or who stands to inherit.
Destitute of hair.
Excessively or tiresomely talkative.
(Greek mythology) the father of Odysseus
Lacking a beard.
A Greek dramatic poet (525 BCE—456 BCE); Aeschylus was the earliest of the three greatest Greek tragedians.
Without fat, especially in the senses: made without fat, fat-free.
(historical) An old English gold coin, worth 20 (or later 23) shillings.
The state of being effortless; facility.
Of a stringed instrument, not having frets on the fingerboard.
Without fur.
A male given name from English.
(pathology) Inflammation of the kidney.
Without merit.
Without debt.
The process of flowing out.
Free from fright; fearless.
(Greek mythology) An ancient Greek lover of Procris who accidentally slew her as she spied upon him.
(transitive, often biology, physiology) To turn inside out (like a pocket being emptied) or outwards.
A surname from Dutch.
(obsolete) Pertaining to air, airy.
A borough and township in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, United States.
A lightweight and loosely woven cotton fabric used to make shirts and underwear.
Initialism of European Free Trade Association. [A trade association composed of Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway and Switzerland]
(obsolete) an incubus; a nightmare
(archaic, literary) Incapable of being uttered.
(zoology, obsolete) Having a head; applied chiefly to the former division of mollusks Cephalata, or Cephalophora (mollusks with a head).
araceae; lemnaceae
A newt, especially a smooth newt (Lissotriton vulgaris, syn. Triturus punctatus), of Europe.
(N)
a genus of Old World jays, passerine birds in the family Corvidae.
an historic genus of Ulidiid or picture-winged flies, first described by Fallén in 1810.
(obsolete) Unwary, incautious.
Without marrow.
AirTouch Communications, Inc. was an American wireless telephone service provider, created as a spin-off of Pacific Telesis on April 1, 1994.
Without oars.
(Scotland, Northern England) direction; quarter
(obsolete) Undeserving.