exemplary |
1. adj. Deserving honour, respect and admiration. | |
2. adj. Of such high quality that it should serve as an example to be imitated; ideal, perfect. | |
Her behaviour was always exemplary. | |
3. adj. Serving as a warning; monitory. | |
exemplary justice, exemplary punishment, exemplary damages | |
4. adj. Providing an example or illustration. | |
5. n. (obsolete) An example, or typical instance. | |
6. n. (obsolete) A copy of a book or a piece of writing. | |
Justice |
1. n. The title of a justice of court. | |
2. n. The state or characteristic of being just or fair. | |
the justice of a description | |
3. n. The ideal of fairness, impartiality, etc., especially with regard to the punishment of wrongdoing. | |
Justice was served. | |
4. n. Judgment and punishment of a party who has allegedly wronged another. | |
to demand justice | |
5. n. The civil power dealing with law. | |
Ministry of Justice | |
the justice system | |
6. n. A title given to judges of certain courts; capitalized as a title. | |
Mr. Justice Krever presides over the appellate court | |
7. n. Correctness, conforming to reality or rules. | |
exemplary |
1. adj. Deserving honour, respect and admiration. | |
2. adj. Of such high quality that it should serve as an example to be imitated; ideal, perfect. | |
Her behaviour was always exemplary. | |
3. adj. Serving as a warning; monitory. | |
exemplary justice, exemplary punishment, exemplary damages | |
4. adj. Providing an example or illustration. | |
5. n. (obsolete) An example, or typical instance. | |
6. n. (obsolete) A copy of a book or a piece of writing. | |
punishment |
1. n. The act or process of punishing, imposing and/or applying a sanction. | |
2. n. A penalty to punish wrongdoing, especially for crime. | |
3. n. A suffering by pain or loss imposed as retribution | |
4. n. (figuratively) Any treatment or experience so harsh it feels like being punished; rough handling | |
a vehicle that can take a lot of punishment | |
exemplary |
1. adj. Deserving honour, respect and admiration. | |
2. adj. Of such high quality that it should serve as an example to be imitated; ideal, perfect. | |
Her behaviour was always exemplary. | |
3. adj. Serving as a warning; monitory. | |
exemplary justice, exemplary punishment, exemplary damages | |
4. adj. Providing an example or illustration. | |
5. n. (obsolete) An example, or typical instance. | |
6. n. (obsolete) A copy of a book or a piece of writing. | |
damages |
1. v. third-person singular present indicative of damage | |
2. n. (legal) The money paid or awarded to a claimant (in England), a pursuer (in Scotland) or a plaintiff (in the US) in a civil action as compensation for a loss suffered by the same. | |
damage |
1. n. Injury or harm; the condition or measure of something not being intact. | |
The storm did a lot of damage to the area. | |
2. n. (slang) Cost or expense. | |
"What's the damage?" he asked the waiter. | |
3. v. To impair the soundness, goodness, or value of; to harm or cause destruction. | |
Be careful not to damage any of the fragile items while unpacking them. | |
Cold temperatures, heavy rain, falling rocks, strong winds and glacier movement can damage the equipment. | |
4. v. (transitive, obsolete) To undergo damage. | |