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.
 By the time she had finished the house was absolutely spotless. The whole house was spotlessly clean.
 The whole house was spotlessly clean.  adjectivespottedspotlessspottynounspotverbspotadverbspotlessly