The Collaborative International Dictionary
Shadowless \Shad"ow*less\, a. Having no shadow.
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
1630s, from shadow (n.) + -less.
Wiktionary
a. Lacking a shadow.
Usage examples of "shadowless".
His feet will turn to desert places Shadowless, reft of rain and dew, Where stars stare down with sharpened faces From heavens pitilessly blue.
At one moment the wall stretched unbroken before Routh, every foot of its well-pointed surface void in the bleak and shadowless sunlight.
The boldest, darkest lines of blue and brown, ancient ideogrammatic symbols of fish, bird and conch were extended in the movement of two rounded shoulder-blades from the matt slope of the neck to their perfect centring on the indented line of spine, rippling as shadowless store lighting ran a scale down it.
Cramped compartments, narrow passageways, the constant hum of electrical equipment, the glare-free, shadowless, flat lighting, the same smell of cold metal and canned stale air.
As before, the windowless chamber was bathed in soft, cool, shadowless light, picking out every thread of grain in the waxed oak council table, every frayed spot of the Archmage's worn robe and every wrinkle of that dried-apple face.
Above, the fluorescents embedded in their long fixtures like inverted ice-cube trays threw a hard, shadowless light.
The illumination by hundreds, thousands, of microminiature point sources was harsh, brilliant, and shadowless.
Under the shadowless glare of fluorescent tubes emerge the nocturnal inhabitants of those offices, like the advance guard of some subterranean civilisation with their weaponry of vacuum cleaners, polishers, mops and buckets.
Brother Mark sat with Cadfael in a hollow of the sand dunes overlooking the open sea, in the clear, almost shadowless light of afternoon.
Night was turned into glaring, shadowless day by flaring arc-sodium lamps that threw a strange orange light.