Similar words: decide, decided, decide on, recidivism, recidivist, deciduous, decidedly, undecided. Meaning: [dɪ'saɪd] n. the cognitive process of reaching a decision. adj. having the power or quality of deciding.
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(181) She was deciding to devote herself to supporting him as he leapt from one peak to another.
(182) Council must take the guidelines into account when deciding whether to grant planning permission for new developments.
(183) She concentrated on her drink to hide her embarrassment, deciding that whisky was all right.
(184) The illusion that juries are deciding our civil cases is encouraged by the judges themselves.
(185) Use your common sense when deciding when children should go to bed.
(186) In deciding on the balance we consider the situations the students are likely to find themselves in during their future careers.
(187) The Court of Appeal reversed this decision, but it was held that instructions were relevant in deciding fitness for purpose.
(188) An informed public is perfectly capable of deciding whether contributions accepted by a lawmaker should disqualify him or her from office.
(189) They also agreed that the participants themselves should have a hand in deciding what they would discuss.
(190) The factors which the court will take into account in deciding whether to approve a scheme of arrangement include the following.
(191) Other investors have hired attorneys and are deciding whom to sue.
(192) The gist of the article is that children should have more rights in deciding their own futures.
(193) When you go to a place called Texas Bone, deciding what to order becomes a moot point.
(194) The first is deciding what kind of investment bank it ought to be.
(195) Financial considerations can never be the deciding factor in sentencing.
(196) An emphasis on deciding development strategies at local level, in the light of local circumstances.
(197) Deciding that enough was enough, Mr Ramsden made some simple but fundamental changes to the credit control process.
(198) And most of the former Warsaw Pact nations have trouble deciding if they want either free elections or free markets.
(199) Living organisms have a similar tradeoff in deciding how much mutation and innovation is needed to keep up with a changing environment.
(200) They then experienced little difficulty in deciding of what private morality consisted.
(201) Students have a free choice deciding on five honours subjects, which are chosen from a total list of about thirty.
(202) For strict conventionalism gives only the negative advice that judges must not pretend to be deciding such cases on legal grounds.
(203) Race should never be a deciding factor in a hiring decision.
(204) White clinched a quarter-final place when he potted the last red and colours to the pink in the deciding frame.
(205) The working class adolescent of the 60s had quite a job deciding what to do with his hair.
(206) Her biggest hassle is deciding which client to bill her hours to.
(207) Taxation is often the deciding factor in choosing between alternative deal structures.
(208) The fact that the goods are of defective quality is usually irrelevant in deciding whether they correspond with their description.
(209) After a while, deciding that discretion was preferable,[Sentencedict.com ] they moved off some distance into the desert parallel to the road.
(210) The important issue, before deciding upon remedial action, is to establish the cause of the movement.
More similar words: decide, decided, decide on, recidivism, recidivist, deciduous, decidedly, undecided, decidability, hiding, riding, abiding, sliding, raiding, chiding, gliding, tidings, deciphering, in hiding, presiding, colliding, confiding, providing, decoding, law-abiding, overriding, upbraiding, riding horse, backsliding, hiding place.