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Easily - Law Dictionary Search Results

Home Dictionary Name: easily

Easily

With ease without difficulty or much effort as this task may be easily performed that event might have been easily foreseen...


Fluid

Having particles which easily move and change their relative position without a separation of the mass and which easily yield to pressure capable of flowing liquid or gaseous...


Fragile

Easily broken brittle frail delicate easily destroyed...


Good natured

Naturally mild in temper not easily provoked amiable cheerful not taking offense easily as too good natured to resent a little criticism the good natured policeman on our block the sounds of good natured play Opposite of ill natured...


Inflammable

Capable of being easily set fire easily enkindled combustible as inflammable oils or spirits...


Lead

One of the elements a heavy pliable inelastic metal having a bright bluish color but easily tarnished It is both malleable and ductile though with little tenacity and is used for tubes sheets bullets etc Its specific gravity is 1137 It is easily fusible melting point 3275deg C forms alloys with other metals and is an ingredient of solder and type metal Atomic number 82 Atomic weight 2072 Symbol Pb L Plumbum It is chiefly obtained from the mineral galena lead sulphide...


Passionate

Capable or susceptible of passion or of different passions easily moved excited or agitated specifically easily moved to anger irascible quick tempered as a passionate nature...


Soft

Easily yielding to pressure easily impressed molded or cut not firm in resisting impressible yielding also malleable opposed to hard as a soft bed a soft peach soft earth soft wood or metal...


apparent

apparent 1 : capable of being easily seen, perceived, or discovered [ defects] [ ambiguity] 2 : having a right to succeed to a title or estate that cannot be defeated 3 : appearing to one's senses and esp. one's vision or to one's understanding as real or true on the basis of evidence that may or may not be correct or factual [an ability to cause injury] [the scope of the agent's authority] ap·par·ent·ly adv ...


damage

damage [Old French, from dam injury, harm, from Latin damnum financial loss, fine] 1 : loss or harm resulting from injury to person, property, or reputation 2 pl : the money awarded to a party in a civil suit as reparation for the loss or injury for which another is liable see also additur, cover, mitigate, remittitur compare declaratory judgment at judgment, injunction specific performance at performance NOTE: The trier of fact determines the amount of damages to be awarded to the prevailing party. More than one type of damages may be awarded for a single injury. actual damages : damages deemed to compensate the injured party for losses sustained as a direct result of the injury suffered called also compensatory damages consequential damages : special damages in this entry direct damages : damages for a loss that is an immediate, natural, and foreseeable result of the wrongful act compare special damages in this entry ex·em·pla·ry damages [ig-zem-plə-r...


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