Associations to the word «Reasonable»
Noun
- Court
- Requirement
- Consideration
- Hypothesis
- Landlord
- Provision
- Judgment
- Considering
- Dismissal
- Caution
- Breach
- Argument
- Discrimination
- Rent
- Validity
- Chance
- Ada
- Search
- Royalty
- Refusal
- Employee
- Respondent
- Prudence
- Paragraph
- Suspect
- Cost
- Ruling
- Efficient
- Wage
- Litigation
- Fair
- Belief
- Arrest
- Judgement
- Supposing
- Basis
- Tenant
- Intent
- Interpretation
- Grievance
- Reasoning
- Innocence
- Prejudice
- Guarantee
- Medicare
- Exclusion
Adjective
Verb
Adverb
Wiktionary
REASONABLE, adjective. Having the faculty of reason; endued with reason; rational.
REASONABLE, adjective. Just; fair; agreeable to reason.
REASONABLE, adjective. Not excessive or immoderate; within due limits; proper.
REASONABLE, adjective. Not expensive; fairly priced.
REASONABLE, adjective. Satisfactory.
REASONABLE DOUBT, noun. (legal) A degree of uncertainty to which a reason can be assigned; in those jurisdictions influenced by English common law, the minimum degree of uncertainty required to acquit a defendant.
REASONABLE DOUBTS, noun. Plural of reasonable doubt
REASONABLE PERSON, noun. (legal) A fictional person used as a comparative legal standard to represent an average member of society and how he or she would behave or think, especially in determining negligence; sometimes formulated as "a person of ordinary prudence exercising due care in like circumstances."
REASONABLE PERSON, noun. Used other than as an idiom: see reasonable, person.
Dictionary definition
REASONABLE, adjective. Showing reason or sound judgment; "a sensible choice"; "a sensible person".
REASONABLE, adjective. Not excessive or extreme; "a fairish income"; "reasonable prices".
REASONABLE, adjective. Marked by sound judgment; "sane nuclear policy".
Wise words
Words - so innocent and powerless as they are, as standing
in a dictionary, how potent for good and evil they become in
the hands of one who knows how to combine them.