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justified
[ juhs-tuh-fahyd ]
adjective
- having been shown to be just or right:
If a parent sides with one child over another, one will feel righteous and justified, and the other will feel misunderstood and resentful.
- warranted or well-grounded:
The commission’s stance is that bans on GMO crops must be scientifically justified and crop-specific.
I accept that there may be a penalty for justified civil disobedience, but I must weigh that penalty against the good that can be accomplished.
- Printing. aligned with one or, especially, both margins:
Justified text looks a little neater, but there's nothing particularly wrong with having a ragged right edge.
noun
- Theology. Usually the justified. a person or persons believed to be worthy, redeemed, or absolved:
Good works are logically and morally necessary, for they are nothing more or less than the evidence that one is indeed among the justified.
verb
- the simple past tense and past participle of justify ( def ).
Other Words From
- half-jus·ti·fied adjective
- un·jus·ti·fied adjective
- well-jus·ti·fied adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of justified1
Example Sentences
In other cases, as Beyerstein noted, it's people who long to have their bigotries justified, and so choose lies over facts.
Glasgow City Council justified the stickers as a way to "reach out to families" where it was uncertain who had responsibility for maintaining the memorial.
Trump has said that “sometimes revenge can be justified.”
Another officer fired the shot that killed Taylor, but prosecutors said his use of deadly force was justified because Walker had opened fire first.
A percentage of those opposed to him, according to a recent poll, have conversely said that force is justified to keep him from the White House.
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