From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishunlimitedun‧lim‧i‧ted /ʌnˈlɪmɪtɪd/●くろまる●くろまる○しろまる adjective1LIMIT#without any limitThe system can support an unlimited number of users.unlimited access to informationThe ticket offers unlimited travel on the London underground for seven days.2LOT/LARGE NUMBER OR AMOUNTvery large in amountan unlimited variety of cookiesExamples from the Corpusunlimited• At the time of the purchase, the extent of Alaska and its resources must have seemed unlimited.• Incorporation may itself take several forms: public or private, limited or unlimited, and with or without a sharecapital.• The maximumpenalty is two years' imprisonment or an unlimitedfine.• Unlike many other unmetered deals, the price also includes unlimitedfreephonetechnicalsupport.• We pay 20ドル a month for unlimitedInternetaccess.• Prices are expected to be in the $ 27 to $ 30 per month range for unlimited Internet access.• This industry had always been known as a growth industry of unlimitedpotential.• The ticket is good for unlimitedtravel on the city's transportation system for 3 days.• It costs $ 500 for unlimited use of the protocol.unlimited number• But suppose you have an unlimited number of deals.• Internet access providers generally charge $ 20 a month but offer an unlimited number of hours per month.• In a hyperbolic plane an unlimited number of lines can pass through the point and not meet the given line.• Learnunlimited numbers of new letters.• For a typicalsemanticconstituent, there is an unlimited number of possible sentential frames.• An unlimited number of sub-accounts are available to financialadvisers.• Hard-disk users are fortunate enough to be able to store an almost unlimited number of usefulmacros.