<adj.all> seemed untroubled by doubts of any kind untroubled sleep a kind untroubled face
free from fear or doubt; easy in mind
<adj.all> he was secure that nothing will be held against him
free from turmoil or worries
<adj.all> untroubled times
City economists were untroubled by the apparent deterioration of UK companies' short-term finances.
Companies like Merrell Dow, hoping to hunker down peacefully in Third World Ireland, are finding that even poor people want to breathe clean air and swim in untroubled waters.
Cabinet ministers act as executive directors, largely untroubled by ideological issues or domestic political infighting.
Col. North was a 19th century romantic, a throwback to a time when Americans damned the torpedos and did what had to be done, untroubled by what Congress, the media or anyone else said.
But whatever his reservations, Yuval has a steely defensiveness about his country and is untroubled by international opprobrium.
If his resignation yesterday had been the only event of an otherwise untroubled season it could be written off as of no significance save to the hapless former minister of state for Northern Ireland.
So far, domestic and international investors have appeared relatively untroubled in the face of widespread expectations that the UK's public sector borrowing requirement (PSBR) could reach Pounds 1bn a week next year. But markets are fickle.