Associations to the word «Intentional»
Noun
- Tort
- Ingestion
- Negligence
- Homicide
- Foul
- Overdose
- Defamation
- Fallacy
- Omission
- Distress
- Batter
- Plaintiff
- Rbi
- Stance
- Deception
- Discrimination
- Libel
- Poisoning
- Misconduct
- Killing
- Triple
- Provocation
- Misuse
- Liability
- Neglect
- Infringement
- Ambiguity
- Sabotage
- Fraud
- Strikeout
- Disregard
- Pun
- Harm
- Interference
- Violation
- Assault
- Intent
- Distortion
- Breach
- Felony
- Concealment
- Defendant
- Batting
- Malice
- Shutout
- Karma
- Exaggeration
- Idiom
- Cognition
- Contamination
- Racism
- Walk
- Genocide
- Harassment
- Arson
- Falsehood
- Consciousness
- Bias
- Deprivation
- Caregiver
- Epidemiology
- Injury
- Burning
- Insult
- Penalty
- Offence
- Semantic
- Doping
- Percentage
Adjective
Adverb
Wiktionary
INTENTIONAL, adjective. Intended or planned; done deliberately or voluntarily.
INTENTIONAL, adjective. (legal) Done with intent.
INTENTIONAL COMMUNITY, noun. A planned residential community designed from the start to have a high degree of social cohesion and teamwork.
INTENTIONAL GROUNDING, noun. (American football) An instance when the quaterback throws the ball into the ground or into the crowds to avoid being sacked and losing field position.
INTENTIONAL PASS, noun. (baseball) An intentional walk.
INTENTIONAL SPECIES, noun. (philosophy) (Aristotelian) form without matter, radiated from a physical object, observed by the eye.
INTENTIONAL WALK, noun. (baseball) The intentional pitching of four balls (bad pitches), or of a fourth ball, in order to give the batter a walk (for example, so as to avoid the risk of a home run).
INTENTIONAL WALK, verb. (baseball) (nonstandard) To intentionally walk; to give a batter an intentional walk.
INTENTIONAL WALKS, noun. Plural of intentional walk
Dictionary definition
INTENTIONAL, adjective. Characterized by conscious design or purpose; "intentional damage"; "a knowing attempt to defraud"; "a willful waste of time".
INTENTIONAL, adjective. Done or made or performed with purpose and intent; "style...is more than the deliberate and designed creation"- Havelock Ellis; "games designed for all ages"; "well-designed houses".
Wise words
Don't use words too big for the subject. Don't say
"infinitely" when you mean "very"; otherwise you'll have no
word left when you want to talk about something really
infinite.