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  1. Dictionary
    error-free

    adjective

    • 1. containing no mistakes; faultless: "the program and the design are error-free"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

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  3. Error-free means without errors or mistakes. The web page provides various definitions of error from different sources, as well as synonyms, related terms, and usage examples.

    • Medical Dictionary

      Use the error-free vector transformation subroutine to...

    • Legal Dictionary

      error-free; Error-Free Burst Distribution; error-free...

    • Encyclopedia

      appeal appeal, in law, hearing by a superior court to...

    • PCR

      er·ror-prone po·ly·mer·ase chain re·ac·tion (PCR)...

    • Undesignedly

      It came out quite unawares, quite undesignedly.I, you may...

    • Unconsciously

      un·con·scious (ŭn-kŏn′shəs) adj. 1. Lacking awareness and...

    • Unintentionally

      Define unintentionally. unintentionally synonyms,...

    • Mess-Up

      error, fault, mistake - a wrong action attributable to bad...

  4. Find synonyms for error-free, a word that means free from defect or error. Browse a list of similar words from our thesaurus that you can use instead of error-free.

  5. Another way to say Error-free? Synonyms for Error-free (other words and phrases for Error-free).

  6. Error-free means containing no mistakes or faultless. See how to use this adjective in different contexts and regions, such as North American and East Asian, with examples from bab.la Dictionary.

  7. Error-free means without error or mistake. Find synonyms, antonyms, related words and sentence examples for error-free on Power Thesaurus.

  8. Synonyms for error-free in Free Thesaurus. Antonyms for error-free. 57 synonyms for error: mistake, slip, fault, blunder, flaw, boob, delusion, oversight, misconception, fallacy, inaccuracy, howler, bloomer, boner....

  9. Error-free means without mistakes or errors. See how to use this adjective in sentences from inspiring English sources, such as The New York Times and The New Yorker.