Compromise-Settlement of a disagreement in which each side agrees to give up part of its demands
An agreement or settlement accepted by two parties.
compromise
a balance achieved between two desirable but incompatible features; a compromise
When both sides give something up to get a part of what they want. YOUR WELCOME
The plan accepted at the philadelphpia convention that called for congress to have two houses.
Depending on what definition you're using, you could use: agreement, bargain, arrangement, compromise, contract, pact, pledge, or handle. Example: She dealt with/handled it well. They had a deal/compromise.
intent to pursue the goals of foreign policy,through effective means of compromise,pursuation and threat of war.
Yes, the definition of stubborn is a person's refusal to change ideas or opinion(s). The definition to inflexable is nearly identical or rather is identical,just that the wording is different which is; a persons unwillingness to change or compromise.
Any knowing, willful or negligent action contrary to the requirements of EO 12958, that is not a security violation (no suspected compromise of information).
By definition, a compromise is a resolution of conflicting sectional interests. 'National compromise' doesn't mean too much. The Compromise of 1850 was a rather desperate attempt to replace the successful Missouri Compromise, which had kept the peace for thirty years, but was rendered inoperable by the admission of California - too big to fit the geographical terms of the compromise. In the new deal, California would be admitted as free soil - a major concession by the South, who then needed to be appeased by the Fugitive Slave Act, allowing official slave-catchers to hunt down runaways. This did not keep the peace, as we know.
the Missouri compromise, the 3/5 compromise, and the compromise of 1850 no it was thethe Missouri compromise, the 3/5 compromise, and the compromise of 1850
It is called a compromise. Examples are the Great Compromise, and the Three-Fifths Compromise.
The Missouri Compromise The Compromise of 1850 The Kansas-Nebraska Act.