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Fancy-free   /fˈænsi-fri/   Listen
Fancy-free

adjective
1.
Having no commitments or responsibilities; carefree.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Fancy-free" Quotes from Famous Books



... more meet to afford it than her artificer of woollens. In this frame of mind she became enamoured of a man well worthy of her love and not yet past middle age, insomuch that, if she saw him not in the day, she must needs pass an unquiet night. The gallant, meanwhile, remained fancy-free, for he knew nought of the lady's case; and she, being apprehensive of possible perils to ensue, was far too circumspect to make it known to him either by writing or by word of mouth of any of her female friends. Then she learned that he had much to ...
— The Decameron, Volume I • Giovanni Boccaccio

... all, the same as that which we have found less directly phrased in Crevecoeur. But let us quote the lines that follow the exordium—now we should find the poet unconstrained and fancy-free:— ...
— Letters from an American Farmer • Hector St. John de Crevecoeur

... imprisonment of Southampton very bitterly, for though he had praised Elizabeth in his salad days again and again, talked about her in "A Midsummer Night's Dream" as a "fair vestal throned by the west"; walking in "maiden meditation, fancy-free"; yet, when she died, he could not be induced to write one word about her. His silence was noticed, and Chettle challenged him to write in praise of the dead sovereign, because she had been kind to him; but he would not: he had come to realise ...
— The Man Shakespeare • Frank Harris



Words linked to "Fancy-free" :   uncommitted



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