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Synonyms for unforced


Grammar : Adj
Spell : fawrst, fohrst
Phonetic Transcription : fɔrst, foʊrst

Top 10 synonyms for unforced Other synonyms for the word unforced

Définition of unforced

Origin :
  • "not spontaneous or voluntary," 1570s, past participle adjective from force (v.). The flier's forced landing attested by 1917.
  • adj voluntary
Example sentences :
  • His unforced geniality made Trent ashamed, for he had liked the man.
  • Extract from : « The Woman in Black » by Edmund Clerihew Bentley
  • Poetry and religious feeling will be the unforced flowers of life.
  • Extract from : « Reconstruction in Philosophy » by John Dewey
  • The conversation, while not specially brilliant, was unforced and gayly bantering.
  • Extract from : « The Deep Lake Mystery » by Carolyn Wells
  • Yet the transition is as unforced as any such transition can be.
  • Extract from : « Expositor's Bible: The Second Epistle to the Corinthians » by James Denney
  • The author's style is simple, natural, and unforced, rather the expression of the scientific than of the literary type of mind.
  • Extract from : « Travels in the Interior of North America, Part I, (Being Chapters I-XV of the London Edition, 1843) » by Alexander Philipp Maximilian, Prince of Wied
  • Not for a great while have I read a story so unforced and appealing.
  • Extract from : « Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 153, Aug. 22, 1917 » by Various
  • No poet was ever warmed by a more genuine or unforced inspiration.
  • Extract from : « The Bay State Monthly, Vol. II, No. 6, March, 1885 » by Various
  • In three columns, it commended little but the character of Marlborough, and the writer's "incomparably easy and unforced style."
  • Extract from : « De Libris: Prose and Verse » by Austin Dobson
  • It gave her content to find tender demonstration becoming more and more an unforced habit.
  • Extract from : « The Confounding of Camelia » by Anne Douglas Sedgwick
  • The grandeur of her Mien was not stiff, but unstudied and unforced, mixed with a simplicity; free, yet not loose nor affected.
  • Extract from : « Incognita » by William Congreve
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