- Appropriate behaviour
- Correct conduct
- Decorum
- Good form
- Individual right to hold property; ownership by personal
title; property.
- That which is proper or peculiar; an inherent property
or quality; peculiarity.
- The quality or state of being proper; suitableness to an
acknowledged or correct standard or rule; consonance with established
principles, rules, or customs; fitness; appropriateness; as, propriety
of behavior, language, manners, etc.
- A la mode
- Cute
- Easy elegance
- Elegant
- Elegantly smart
- Extremely charismatic and stylish
- Fashionable
- Commences in good form
- Has a successful launch though seen to plead in waves
- Good form from golfer to Colonel
- Rules of conduct shown by golfer to colonel
- The original copy of any writing, as of a deed, treaty,
dispatch, or other instrument.
- The minutes, or rough draught, of an instrument or
transaction.
- A preliminary document upon the basis of which
negotiations are carried on.
- A convention not formally ratified.
- An agreement of diplomatists indicating the results
reached by them at a particular stage of a negotiation.
- Manner; custom; habit; form of behavior; qualities of mind;
disposition; specifically, good qualities; virtues.
- Muscle or strength; nerve; brawn; sinew.
- A characteristic
- Characteristic
- Distinctive attribute or aspect
- Give special prominence to
- The make, form, or outward appearance of a person; the
whole turn or style of the body; esp., good appearance.
- The make, cast, or appearance of the human face, and
especially of any single part of the face; a lineament. (pl.) The face,
the countenance.
- The cast or structure of anything, or of any part of a
thing, as of a landscape, a picture, a treaty, or an essay; any marked
peculiarity or characteristic; as, one of the features of the
landscape.
- A receipt
- Coupon
- Money owed
- One who vouches, or gives witness or full attestation, to
anything.
- A book, paper, or document which serves to vouch the truth
of accounts, or to confirm and establish facts of any kind; also, any
acquittance or receipt showing the payment of a debt; as, the
merchant's books are his vouchers for the correctness of his accounts;
notes, bonds, receipts, and other writings, are used as vouchers in
proving facts.
- The act of calling in a person to make good his warranty
of title in the old form of action for the recovery of lands.
- The tenant in a writ of right; one who calls in another to
establish his warranty of title. In common recoveries, there may be a
single voucher or double vouchers.