Definitionadj. concerning each of two or more persons or things
Last update: January 25, 2017
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There should be reciprocal relationship between parents and children . [adjective]
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The juxtaposition of two different colors has reciprocal effects on each. [adjective]
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A healthy marriage is based on a reciprocal relationship in which two individuals share their lives with each other. [adjective]
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Koreans, like many Asians, believe in reciprocal altruism. [adjective]
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And that this amazing condescension--received with a smiling and curtsying civility--should have been unacknowledged by any reciprocal courtesy was an affront that could hardly be wiped out with blood. [adjective]
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We cannot even imagine without horror the possibility of a disagreement between these people and ourselves which would call for reciprocal murder. [adjective]
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That is what happens, when various classes of producers pay to each other a reciprocal tribute of admiration and praise. [adjective]
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Evidently, the surrenders would have been reciprocal; no right would have been abandoned without the receipt of an equivalent in exchange. [adjective]
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We know that originally such a right cannot be legitimate unless it is reciprocal; the jurists say as much. [adjective]
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Silent, each contemplating the other in both mirrors of the reciprocal flesh of theirhisnothis fellowfaces. [adjective]
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