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Definition of Frictionless
1. Adjective. Lacking all friction. "A perpetual motion machine would have to be frictionless"
Definition of Frictionless
1. a. Having no friction.
Definition of Frictionless
1. Adjective. Of or pertaining to lack of friction. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Frictionless
1. [adj]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Frictionless
Literary usage of Frictionless
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Italian Contribution to American Democracy by John Horace Mariano (1921)
"SOCIALLY PREPARE FOR A MORE frictionless MIXING DIFFERENT ATTITUDE OF MIND —Today,
as in the past, how to prepare for a more "frictionless mix- ..."
2. Progressive Furnace Heating by Alfred Grant King, William Neubecker (1914)
"There are various styles of starters but those most generally used on first class
jobs are known as "box shaped" and "frictionless." Care should be taken in ..."
3. Progressive Furnace Heating by Alfred Grant King, William Neubecker (1914)
"There are various styles of starters but those most generally used on first class
jobs are known as "box shaped" and "frictionless." Care should be taken in ..."
4. Resistance of Ships and Screw Propulsion by David Watson Taylor (1893)
"Suppose we have held deeply submerged, in a perfect and incompressible fluid, a
small, smooth, or frictionless solid with sharp head and tail, ..."
5. A Treatise on Hydrodynamics: With Numerous Examples by Alfred Barnard Basset (1888)
"... initial value of \lr is which is the known value of i/r in the case of a
frictionless liquid, as ought to be the case. When í is very large, ..."
6. Maintenance of Way and Structures by William Clyde Willard (1915)
"Weber joint on frictionless rail; DL & WRR Weber ... Lackawanna & Western RR on
the frictionless rail, and designed for screw-spikes, is shown in Fig. 66. ..."
7. Applied Aerodynamics by Leonard Bairstow (1920)
"ELEMENTARY MATHEMATICAL THEORY OF FLUID MOTION frictionless Incompressible
Fluid.—In spite of the fact that other and more powerful methods exist, ..."