fair
81fair — 1. poor A classification denoting scholastic performance or the quality of goods and services which is just above the lowest rating or outright rejection. It should mean favourable, or at least halfway between good and bad. 2. unfair… …
82fair do — /fɛə ˈdu/ (say fair dooh) noun, interjection NZ Colloquial → fair go …
83fair — /feə/ noun same as trade fair ● The computer fair runs from April 1st to 6th. ■ adjective honest or correct …
84fair do's — 1. Let there be fairness in dealing. 2. Fair and equal shares. 3. Mild excl. Please be fair …
85fair — /feə/ noun same as trade fair ● The computer fair runs from April 1st to 6th. ■ adjective reasonable, with equal treatment …
86fair — English has two distinct words fair, one Germanic and the other Romance. The older, meaning ‘beautiful’ [OE], comes from a prehistoric Germanic *fagraz, which survives also in Swedish fager ‘beautiful’. It derived from a base *fag , which seems… …
87FAIR — Cette page d’homonymie répertorie les différents sujets et articles partageant un même nom.   Sigles d’une seule lettre   Sigles de deux lettres   Sigles de trois lettres > Sigles de quatre lettres …
88fair up — verb To clear They said it was going to fair up later on, but it didnt …
89Fair — The gathering of sellers and traders at set intervals at particular places under a licence or charter granted by a lord for which he was paid. Such occasions took on the character of a local holiday. A few still exist, e.g. the annual Nottingham… …
90FAIR — • Fundamentals of Artificial Intelligence Research, International Workshop FAIR, Ph. Jorrand and J. Kelemen (Eds.), LNCS535, 1991 (informationswissenschaftl. Veoeffentlichungen) • Fabrication, Assembly, & Inspection Record NASA …