Familia de palabras
(noun)
harmharmlessness
(adjective)
unharmedharmful ≠ harmless
(verb)
harm
(adverb)
harmlessly
Del Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishharmlessharm‧less /ˈhɑːmləs $ ˈhɑːrm-/ ●○○ adjective1HARM/BE BAD FORunable or unlikely to hurt anyone or cause damage
Her brother’s a bit simple, but he’s quite harmless.2OFFENDnot likely to upset or offend anyone
It was just a bit of harmless fun. —harmlessly adverb
The spear whistled harmlessly over his head. —harmlessness noun [uncountable]Ejemplos desde el Corpusharmless• But some diseases remain fatal, while others quickly become almost harmless.• There are over 80 strains, the vastmajority symptomless and harmless.• Our dog makes a lot of noise, but he's perfectly harmless.• Radioactivewaste needs to be stored for 25,000 years before it is harmless.• We need to persuade parents that almost all vaccines are harmless.• At the other end of the scale a short list of names and addresses is not necessarily harmless.• Then the enginenote was suddenly fading, turning light and harmless, and Dickinson felt the controls start to answer.• I don't know why you're so upset -- it was only a harmlessbit of fun.• He's a little crazy, I know, but he's harmless enough.• harmless fun• Malemosquitoes are completely harmless - it's only the females that bite.• The harmless noises of the countrysidesurrounded him.• Judgedharmless, Paul was released on his own cognizance.• Those genes would produce a harmlessprotein that, once inside the body, would sound the falsealarm of infection.• Essentialoils are harmless to skin, provided they are used correctly.harmless fun• He'd never done it before but thought it sounded like harmless fun.• Obviously, he still thought he was just having a little harmless fun.• A 0 signifiesharmless fun; a 5 meansgore, smut, roughlanguage or adult themes lurk ahead.• It will provide harmless fun for millions and give valuablefunding to the Arts and sports.• He did not think people wanted harmless fun on Sunday.