English

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Etymology

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From keeper-less.

Adjective

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keeperless

  1. Not having a keeper; not minded; not kept.
    • 1834, “Gilbert Gurney”, in The New monthly magazine and universal register:
      Among the groupe was a man, whose name was Daly — who, of all the people accounted sane and permitted to range the world keeperless, I hold to be the most decidedly mad.