Definitionadj. relating to or constituting or bearing or giving a name
Last update: February 7, 2016
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The students pay nominal fee in the university. [adjective]
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The allotment of shares at a discount, i.e. at an issue price for a share below its nominal value. [adjective]
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There must be a nominal landing, of course, of a strictly limited number, and they must be secured for a measurable period from any ill-judged interruption. [adjective]
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"If the nominal proprietor should plead ignorance, his claim would be none the more valid." [adjective]
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But the distinction between the banker and the usurer is a purely nominal one. [adjective]
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Increase--a sort of royal prerogative, of tangible and consumable homage--is due to the proprietor on account of his nominal and metaphysical occupancy. [adjective]
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The American manufacturer caters to the demand of his customers for machines of high power by advancing the nominal rating quite beyond the power actually developed. [adjective]
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Those workingmen who favor a nominal increase of wages are, unconsciously following a back-track, opposed to all their interests. [adjective]
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It was no nominal meal that we were going to make, but a vigorous reality. [adjective]
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"I'd call that a nominal bid, to avoid suspicion." [Please select]
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In 1438 the Pragmatic Sanction of Bourges adopted and put into practice the Basel decrees, and in spite of the incessant protests of the Holy See the Pragmatic was observed throughout the 15th century, even after its nominal abolition by Louis XI. [Please select]
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