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ALL meanings of fairest

fair
F f
  • adjective fairest free from bias, dishonesty, or injustice: a fair decision; a fair judge. 1
  • adjective fairest legitimately sought, pursued, done, given, etc.; proper under the rules: a fair fight. 1
  • adjective fairest moderately large; ample: a fair income. 1
  • adjective fairest neither excellent nor poor; moderately or tolerably good: fair health. 1
  • adjective fairest marked by favoring conditions; likely; promising: in a fair way to succeed. 1
  • adjective fairest Meteorology. (of the sky) bright; sunny; cloudless to half-cloudy. (of the weather) fine; with no prospect of rain, snow, or hail; not stormy. 1
  • adjective fairest Nautical. (of a wind or tide) tending to aid the progress of a vessel. 1
  • adjective fairest unobstructed; not blocked up: The way was fair for our advance. 1
  • adjective fairest without irregularity or unevenness: a fair surface. 1
  • adjective fairest free from blemish, imperfection, or anything that impairs the appearance, quality, or character: Her fair reputation was ruined by gossip. 1
  • adjective fairest easy to read; clear: fair handwriting. 1
  • adjective fairest of a light hue; not dark: fair skin. 1
  • adjective fairest pleasing in appearance; attractive: a fair young maiden. 1
  • adjective fairest seemingly good or sincere but not really so: The suitor beguiled his mistress with fair speeches. 1
  • noun fairest Superlative form of fair. 1
  • adjective fairest courteous; civil: fair words. 1
  • adjective fairest Medicine/Medical. (of a patient's condition) having stable and normal vital signs and other favorable indicators, as appetite and mobility, but being in some discomfort and having the possibility of a worsening state. 1
  • adjective fairest Dialect. scarcely; barely: It was just fair daylight when we started working. 1
  • adverb fairest in a fair manner: He doesn't play fair. 1
  • adverb fairest straight; directly, as in aiming or hitting: He threw the ball fair to the goal. 1
  • adverb fairest favorably; auspiciously. 1
  • adverb fairest British, Australian. entirely; completely; quite: It happened so quickly that it fair took my breath away. 1
  • noun fairest Archaic. something that is fair. 1
  • noun fairest Archaic. a woman. a beloved woman. 1
  • verb with object fairest to make the connection or junction of (surfaces) smooth and even. 1
  • verb with object fairest Shipbuilding. to draw and adjust (the lines of a hull being designed) to produce regular surfaces of the correct form. to adjust the form of (a frame or templet) in accordance with a design, or cause it to conform to the general form of a hull. to restore (a bent plate or structural member) to its original form. to align (the frames of a vessel under construction) in proper position. 1
  • verb with object fairest to bring (rivet holes in connecting structural members) into perfect alignment. 1
  • verb with object fairest Obsolete. to make fair. 1
  • idioms fairest bid fair, to seem likely: This entry bids fair to win first prize. 1
  • idioms fairest fair and square, honestly; justly; straightforwardly: He won the race fair and square. honest; just; straightforward: He was admired for being fair and square in all his dealings. 1
  • idioms fairest fair to middling, Informal. only tolerably good; so-so. 1
  • adjective fairest superlative form of fair: most fair. 0
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