Evident without much research, consideration or thought. It also has implications medically which may also be legal: an apparent lesion is one which is frank and can be seen easily without much difficulty or assistance; in contrast to an occult lesion which may easily be missed or mistaken.
In legal terms, the word "apparent" typically refers to something that is evident, obvious, or clear upon observation or examination. It can also refer to something that appears to be true or valid based on the available evidence, but may not necessarily be proven or accepted as such. The legal use of the term "apparent" often indicates that something is perceived or believed to be the case, but further investigation or evidence may be required to establish its actual truth or validity.
"From the beginning, it was apparent that Lucy would win."
"From the beginning, it was apparent that Lucy would win."
The original meaning of the word abuse is " to use". It comes from the Latin word Abusus, meaning "misuse or to use". This word has been in many different languages but the meaning still seems to be to use something badly, be it power, people or animals.
It is spelled both ways, co-worker or coworker, with no apparent preference, except by some spell-checkers that use coworkerand spellchecker. There is no similar word that would confuse the intended meaning.
AG is a legal word in scrabble.
subtext. Subtext refers to the underlying or implicit meaning of a word, phrase, or text that may not be immediately apparent. It often conveys deeper emotions, intentions, or messages that go beyond the literal interpretation.
I intend to show you the meaning of the word "intend".
Yes. Cate is a legal Scrabble word.
No. VIZ is not a legal English scrabble word.
The word "quiddity" is a noun. An example of a sentence using the word would be: The true quiddity of the organization is becoming apparent.
It is a word meaning "in an unsafe manner", it is not widely used - its a rather clumsy construction and there is a more elegent synonym (dangerously). There is a legal use of the word; convictions are sometimes described as "unsafe" meaning that was insufficient or bad evidence used in the trial. In such a situation one might say "he was convicted unsafely".
The company sought legal advice before drafting the contract.