barless

barless

(ˈbɑːlɪs)
adj
without a bar or bars
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in periodicals archive ?
The Batley Adaptable Barless Fire for Kitchen Ranges had been patented by Wood and Robertsaw, of Commercial Street, Batley, and pledged to save money on coal.
Another system, CellGuard, used in custodial applications, allows a barless window that still prevents escape or intrusion from the outside.
Frank di Pietro (2), Mark Bowery and Chris Barless netted, with Lee Proudlock, David Fittes and Keith Vincent on target for St Cuthbert's.
Traditionally Ladbrooke Pianos has worked with Broadwood and together the firms developed a new "barless"
As original as is the idea of the barless cage, it is perhaps more striking that the idea of exhibiting animals in this way seems to have been derived from Hagenbeck's extensive experience beginning in the mid-1870s of exhibiting groups of humans from distant and unfamiliar cultures: Laplanders, Sudanese, Inuit from Greenland, and Sri Lankans, among others.
The examples are presented in barless transcriptions with the initia marked by a dot at the tempus level and by a slash at the prolation level, with the syllables numbered and underlaid exactly as they appear in Ox.
Lee Barless doubled the lead in the 40th minute by lashing home the rebound after Jason Bindley cleared off the line to deny Points.
Barless, How to Obtain an Environmental Site Assessment (Or Ignorance Is Not Bliss-Unless You're Investigated, 9 UTAH B.J.
If Satie, as we know, responded enthusiastically to seeing the opera on 18 May 1887,(13) it is unlikely that he would have waited over three months before making a non-functional transformation of an isolated passage (bars 15-19) that he had heard only once, without a score.(14) We know that Satie had a superb ear, but it is far more likely that his harmonic audacities (which undoubtedly influenced Debussy's Sarabande of 1894) came about as a logical extension of the sevenths, ninths and even thirteenths without conventional preparation or resolution that we find in his barless song 'Sylvie' of April 1887.(15) Even more remarkable is the way that Satie's first Sarabande begins on a tonic seventh on A[flat] and reaches B[double flat] (A) major by bar 8 (Ex.
e group of men had followed the man from Audio nightclub as he walked further up the road by the Batley Barless Fire Co where they subjected him to an assault.