Reasonable means that it is Ok but not to good. it is sort of a maybe. 'A reasonable' is a different MATTER. it can work in a sentence like, "the man's penis was a reasonable item to have intercourse with'.
REASONABLE - Conformable or agreeable to reason; just; rational.
(from: http://www.lectlaw.com/def2/q101.htm)
The word "reasonable" is an adjective and not a noun, therefore tricky to define with any specificity. It is used when applicable to some other word with which it is used to amplify and add meaning to.
See below link for a discussion of its use:
A "reasonable person" is a legal standard used in negligence (personal injury) cases.
The hypothetical 'reasonable person' acts and behaves in a way that is legally appropriate. Those who do not meet this standard -- that is, they do not behave as a reasonable person should or would -- are considered negligent and may be held liable for damages caused by their actions, or inaction.
Ownership is the legal term that describes the property a person possesses.
reasonable grounds meaning
Reasonable cause, or reasonable suspicion, is a legal term for enough evidence to suggest that someone might be carrying a weapon to warrant a pat down. Only weapons can be searched for based on reasonable cause.
uniform billing sets
Articulabe suspicion is another term for reasonable suspicion. Reasonable suspicion is based on reasonable facts and can be used in arrests and warrants of a person in the United States.
The legal term 'double jeopardy' is a legal defence whereby an accused person cannot be tried for the same offence twice based on the same fact if they have already been convicted or acquitted of the same offence.
Clergymen are men of the clergy, as in church men, and it's not a legal term.
Articulabe suspicion is another term for reasonable suspicion. Reasonable suspicion is based on reasonable facts and can be used in arrests and warrants of a person in the United States.
it means it is legal to have a foot
The legal term for a person who initiates a lawsuit against another person for neglectful actions or wrongdoing is a plaintiff.
I think you are confusing your legal terminology. I've never heard the term "reasonable search" applied to any search. There is a a phrase; "reasonable suspicion," that is used to support a field search conducted under a "Terry stop."
in this section only