Similar words: in terms of, come to terms with, term, long-term, short-term, permit, German, fisherman. Meaning: [tɜrm /tɜːm] n. 1. status with respect to the relations between people or groups 2. the amount of money needed to purchase something.
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91. They offered me a loan on very favourable terms.
92. The dispute was resolved on amicable terms.
93. His reply was couched in sinister terms .
94. Before proceeding further, we must define our terms.
95. He's on familiar terms with all the teachers.
96. The idea is almost a contradiction in terms.
97. I know how it works in general terms.
98. I'm on first-name terms with my boss now .
99. The letter was deliberately couched in very vague terms.
100. A 'nomad settlement' is a contradiction in terms.sentencedict .com
101. They met to finalize the terms of the treaty.
102. English sporting terms have been naturalised in many languages.
103. The enemy was eventually forced to come to terms.
104. He's on speaking terms with a number of senior politicians.
105. John is on equal terms with Dick, either in ability or in character.
106. He referred to your work in terms of high praise/in flattering terms.
107. In terms of experience, she definitely had the edge over the other people that we interviewed.
108. In absolute terms British wages remain low by European standards.
109. Although prices are falling in absolute terms, energy is still expensive.
110. She was on friendly terms with most of the hospital staff.
111. If you agree to my terms -- free meals and good wages — I will work for you.
112. She quarrelled with her brother about the terms of their father's will.
113. The differences in the children's achievements were not wholly explicable in terms of their social backgrounds.
114. In broad terms, the paper argues that each country should develop its own policy.
115. By using cheaper materials, the company has broken the terms of its contract.
116. Do you understand all the terms of the lease ?
117. Under the terms of the deal, the band has to make two albums a year.
118. They were accused of non-observance of the terms of the contract.
119. Of course, a 200-year-old building is very old in American terms.
120. Do you think they would subscribe to such harsh terms?
More similar words: in terms of, come to terms with, term, long-term, short-term, permit, German, fisherman, permission, undermine, never mind, supermarket, furthermore, bewilderment, outer, later, alter, water, meter, after, letter, voter, poster, latter, terror, mutter, oyster, filter, foster, hunter.