light-hearted
11light-hearted — a. Gladsome, cheerful, joyful, joyous, gay, merry, glad, blithe, blithesome, gleeful, jovial, jolly, jocund, frolicsome …
12light-hearted — adj cheerful, cheery, gay, sunny, bright, in good or high spirits, Chiefly U.S. Inf. chipper, lightsome; blithe, blithesome, buoyant, optimistic, positive, Inf. upbeat, beamish; debonair, free and easy, carefree, Fr. sans souci. insouciant, devil …
13light-hearted — [ˌlaɪt ˈhɑːtɪd] adj 1) funny and not intended to be serious 2) happy and not worried about anything …
14light-hearted — adjective carefree and happy and lighthearted was loved for her blithe spirit a merry blithesome nature her lighthearted nature trilling songs with a lightsome heart • Syn: ↑blithe, ↑blithesome, ↑lighthearted, ↑ …
15Jack the Ripper, Light-Hearted Friend — is a 1996 book by Richard Wallace in which Wallace expressed the theory that British author Lewis Carroll, whose real name was Charles L. Dodgson (1832 1898) and his colleague Thomas Vere Bayne were responsible for the Jack the Ripper murders.… …
16light´-heart´ed|ness — light heart|ed «LYT HAHR tihd», adjective. without worry; carefree; cheerful; gay: »light hearted lads, a light hearted laugh. –light´ heart´ed|ly, adverb. –light´ heart´ed|ness, noun …
17light´-heart´ed|ly — light heart|ed «LYT HAHR tihd», adjective. without worry; carefree; cheerful; gay: »light hearted lads, a light hearted laugh. –light´ heart´ed|ly, adverb. –light´ heart´ed|ness, noun …
18light-heart|ed — «LYT HAHR tihd», adjective. without worry; carefree; cheerful; gay: »light hearted lads, a light hearted laugh. –light´ heart´ed|ly, adverb. –light´ heart´ed|ness, noun …
19Light-heartedly — Light hearted Light heart ed (l[imac]t h[aum]rt [e^]d), a. Free from grief or anxiety; gay; cheerful; merry. {Light heart ed*ly}, adv. {Light heart ed*ness}, n. [1913 Webster] …
20Light-heartedness — Light hearted Light heart ed (l[imac]t h[aum]rt [e^]d), a. Free from grief or anxiety; gay; cheerful; merry. {Light heart ed*ly}, adv. {Light heart ed*ness}, n. [1913 Webster] …