different between meatless vs seatless

meatless

English

Etymology

From Middle English meteles, from Old English metel?as (foodless), equivalent to meat +? -less.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?mi?tl?s/

Adjective

meatless (not comparable)

  1. Without meat.
    • 1916, The Saturday Review of Politics, Literature, Science and Art
      A meatless day or a beerless or tealess day does not suggest moderation so much as immoderation.
    • 1942, Winston S. Churchill, The Hinge of Fate, vol. 4 of The Second World War (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1950), p. 300. [Memo from Prime Minister Churchill to General Ismay dated April 3, 1942]
      Are we to understand from paragraph 1 (c) that [the residents of Malta] are entirely meatless? or have they cattle they can kill, and if so how many?

Antonyms

  • meatful

Translations

Anagrams

  • Malteses, mateless, tameless, teamless

meatless From the web:

  • what meatless foods are high in protein
  • what's meatless monday
  • meatless meat
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  • what are meatless burgers made of
  • what is meatless chicken
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  • what is meatless chicken made of


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
  • what do seamless mean
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