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- HARMLESS Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of HARMLESS is free from harm, liability, or loss How to use harmless in a sentence
- HARMLESS | definition in the Cambridge English Dictionary
HARMLESS meaning: 1 not able or not likely to cause harm: 2 not able or not likely to cause harm: 3 not able or… Learn more
- HARMLESS definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary
If you describe someone or something as harmless, you mean that they are not important and therefore unlikely to annoy other people or cause trouble He seemed harmless enough I would not want to deny them a harmless pleasure
- harmless adjective - Definition, pictures, pronunciation and usage . . .
Definition of harmless adjective in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more
- HARMLESS Definition Meaning | Dictionary. com
adjective without the power or desire to do harm; innocuous He looks mean but he's harmless; a harmless Halloween prank Synonyms: benign, unobjectionable, innocent, mild, inoffensive without injury; unhurt; unharmed
- harmless - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Middle English harmles, from Old English *hearmlēas, from Proto-Germanic *harmalausaz (“without harm; harmless”), equivalent to harm + -less Cognate with German harmlos (“harmless”), Danish harmløs (“harlmess”), Swedish harmlös (“harmless”)
- harmless - WordReference. com Dictionary of English
harm•less (härm′ lis), adj without the power or desire to do harm; innocuous: He looks mean but he's harmless; a harmless Halloween prank without injury; unhurt; unharmed Lawmaking hold harmless, to relieve from responsibility or liability for any damage or loss Also, save harmless
- Harmless - Definition, Meaning Synonyms | Vocabulary. com
Things that are safe or benign don't cause harm, and are therefore harmless, like your dad's harmless teasing or a compostable paper plate that's harmless to the environment The word harmless originally meant "uninjured," or "not harmed," and came to mean "undamaged" by the end of the 1300s
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