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  1. Dictionary
    blithesome
    /ˈblʌɪðs(ə)m/

    adjective

    • 1. (of a person) having a cheerful disposition: archaic "the ploughman is a blithesome lad"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Blithesome is an adjective that means happy and without care or worry. It is often used in literary contexts to describe a cheerful mood or a pleasant scene. See how to pronounce it and some synonyms and examples.

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  3. Blithesome is an adjective that means happy and without care or worry. It is often used in literary contexts to describe a cheerful mood or a pleasant scene. See how to use it in sentences and synonyms.

  4. Blithesome is an adjective that means gay or merry. It comes from blithe, which has been in the language for six centuries. See synonyms, examples, word history, and related articles.

  5. Blithesome means lighthearted, merry, or cheerful. It is a literary adjective derived from blithe, meaning happy or joyful. See how to use blithesome in a sentence and its origin and history.

  6. To be blithesome is to be happy and without a care in the world. If you are feeling blithesome, you might want to skip or at least kick your heels up in the air. When you're blissfully happy and don't have a single worry, you're blithesome.

  7. Blithesome means having or showing a good mood or disposition, or indicative of or marked by high spirits or good humor. Find 182 similar and opposite words for blithesome, such as cheerful, merry, jolly, and gloomy, sullen, morose.

  8. Blithesome is an adjective that means cheery, merry, or lighthearted. It is derived from blithe, which means happy or carefree. See examples, synonyms, and word origin of blithesome.