boundless

/ˈbaʊndləs/ (bre, ipa) · /ˈbaʊndləs/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈbau̇n(d)-ləs/ (ame, mw)

boundless — adjective

  • boundlesspositive
  • more boundlesscomparative
  • most boundlesssuperlative

1. having or appearing to have no outer edge or end, especially when describing a q

1.形容詞B2
釋義

having or appearing to have no outer edge or end, especially when describing a quality, feeling, or amount that seems unlimited in size or strength — for instance, someone's energy that never runs out, or a landscape that stretches farther than the eye can see.

例句

The young architect looked at the empty lot with boundless optimism, certain she could build something beautiful there.

collocation: boundless optimism / boundless energy

From the hilltop, the travellers stared at the boundless desert that stretched to every horizon.

boundless + physical landscape (poetic/dramatic use)

同義詞
  • endless

    more common in everyday speech; emphasises time or duration

  • limitless

    nearly identical in meaning; often used with opportunities, potential, possibilities

  • infinite

    more formal and technical; used in mathematics, philosophy, or spiritual contexts

  • immeasurable

    emphasises that something cannot be measured; formal register

反義詞
  • limited

    having a clear boundary or restriction; opposite in most contexts

  • finite

    having a definite end or limit; more formal, often technical

  • restricted

    controlled by rules or limits; narrower and more specific than 'limited'

文法句型

be + boundless

boundless + noun

用法筆記

Most commonly used with abstract nouns such as energy, enthusiasm, imagination, love, kindness, patience, and ambition. Using it for concrete physical space (e.g., boundless desert, boundless ocean) gives the sentence a literary or dramatic feel.

常見錯誤

The cupboard seemed boundless.
The cupboard seemed bottomless.
💡'Boundless' describes things without conceptual limits, not physical containers that hold more than expected.
I have boundlessly money.
I have boundless money.
💡'Boundless' is an adjective, not an adverb. The adverbial form is 'boundlessly' (e.g., 'She is boundlessly generous').