unsore
English
Etymology
From Middle English *unsor, *unsar, from Old English unsār (“not sore”), equivalent to un- + sore.
Adjective
unsore (comparative more unsore, superlative most unsore)
- Not sore; without soreness or pain.
- 2016, Alison Kent, Three Times Love:
- After last night, after Logan had lifted her from the couch and carried her to his bed, after they'd made a mess of grilled cheese sandwiches and hot fudge sundaes, not a muscle on her skeleton was unused, untested, or unsore.