spotlessspot‧less /ˈspɒtləs $ ˈspɑːt-/ adjective - Mother always kept the house spotless.
- Bed linen should be spotless and pyjamas or nightdresses well cared for.
- It featured newly spotless facilities and special work uniforms for all the mechanics.
- She walked out of the station into the spotless, tree-lined, Sunday-afternoon streets of Woodburn.
- The bed was hard and absolutely spotless.
- The sink and the faucet are spotless.
- The tile was a pristine white and the place was spotless, with benches anchored to the floor, mirrors everywhere.
- True, the whole place was spotless.
- Willow trees bend gently along spotless avenues and ancient canals.
► clean without any dirt or marks: · They need clean water to drink.· I don’t have any clean clothes.
► pure water or air that is pure does not contain any dirt, pollution, or bacteria: · I breathed in the pure mountain air.
► sterile completely clean, with no bacteria, and therefore safe for medical or scientific use: · Place a sterile bandage on the wound.· sterile needles
► spotless completely clean – used mainly about rooms and clothes: · Her kitchen is always spotless.
► pristine completely clean and new-looking: · He wore a pristine white shirt.
► immaculate as clean and tidy as it is possible to be: · The soldiers’ uniforms have to be immaculate.
► spick and span [not before noun] informal clean and tidy, especially after having just been cleaned: · By the end of the day, the whole place was spick and span.
► absolutely spotless By the time she had finished the house was absolutely spotless. ► spotlessly clean The whole house was spotlessly clean. adjectivespottedspotlessspottynounspotverbspotadverbspotlessly