• Matchless

    Origin

    From match + -less, modelled after or partly continuing Middle English makeless ("having no peer or equal, matchless"), equivalent to make + -less. Compare Swedish makalös ("incomparable, matchless"), Danish mageløs ("matchless").

    Full definition of matchless

    Adjective

    matchless

    1. Having no match; without equal.
      • 1819, Sir Walter Scott, Ivanhoe, ch. 8:The Prince was to declare the victor in the first day's tourney, who should receive as prize a warhorse of exquisite beauty and matchless strength.
      • 2002, Daniel Okrent, "Books: A Prince of a Pitcher" (Review of: Sandy Koufax: A Lefty's Legacy), Time, 30 Sept.:It was not his matchless talent that exalted Koufax beyond his greatest contemporaries so much as it was his knowledge that character was not connected to talent.
    2. Having no mate.
      • 2010, Sandra Brennan, "Movies: The Flying Matchmaker (1966)," nytimes.com, 1 June (retrieved 13 Sep 2010):In this comedy, a matchmaker has a matchless daughter. Try as he might, he cannot seem to find anyone for her.
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