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Formalities   /fɔrmˈælətiz/   Listen
noun
Formality  n.  (pl. formalities)  
1.
The condition or quality of being formal, strictly ceremonious, precise, etc.
2.
Form without substance. "Such (books) as are mere pieces of formality, so that if you look on them, you look though them."
3.
Compliance with formal or conventional rules; ceremony; conventionality. "Nor was his attendance on divine offices a matter of formality and custom, but of conscience."
4.
An established order; conventional rule of procedure; usual method; habitual mode. "He was installed with all the usual formalities."
5.
pl. The dress prescribed for any body of men, academical, municipal, or sacerdotal. (Obs.) "The doctors attending her in their formalities as far as Shotover."
6.
That which is formal; the formal part. "It unties the inward knot of marriage,... while it aims to keep fast the outward formality."
7.
The quality which makes a thing what it is; essence. "The material part of the evil came from our father upon us, but the formality of it, the sting and the curse, is only by ourselves." "The formality of the vow lies in the promise made to God."
8.
(Scholastic. Philos.) The manner in which a thing is conceived or constituted by an act of human thinking; the result of such an act; as, animality and rationality are formalities.



formalities  n.  A set of procedures required to make a transaction official.
Synonyms: form, formality.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Formalities" Quotes from Famous Books



... in the army was chiefly due to bad transport. Clothing was another matter. One of the things insisted upon in a well-trained army is a decent regard for appearance, and in the eyes of the French and the British officers the American army usually seemed rather unkempt. The formalities of dress, the uniformity of pipe-clay and powdered hair, of polished steel and brass, can of course be overdone. The British army had too much of it, but to Washington's force the danger was of having too little. It was not easy to induce farmers and frontiersmen who at home began the day ...
— Washington and his Comrades in Arms - A Chronicle of the War of Independence • George Wrong

... waive all formalities," said the Governor, "as my guest your official connections, real or fictitious, concern me ...
— Blacksheep! Blacksheep! • Meredith Nicholson

... favour to get them. Traffic in shares was discountenanced: the company had no wish to be regarded as a cluster of speculators, but rather as a band of brothers, co-operating together for their common benefit. Of course, the necessary legal formalities were gone through—that could not safely be ...
— Chambers's Edinburgh Journal, No. 460 - Volume 18, New Series, October 23, 1852 • Various

... parents arrived, our Caroline, full of food and contentment, greeted them with cooes of delight. From the moment their eyes fell upon her they were ravished with desire. Not a suspicion crossed their unobservant minds that this sweet little rosebud was the child of the morning. And so, a few formalities having been complied with, it really looks as though baby Caroline would live in the Towers and grow into ...
— Dear Enemy • Jean Webster

... be no more than the claims of the occasion justify (wait and hear) in certain other cases where the thing sought for and granted is avowedly less by a million degrees. It shall all be traffic, exchange (counting spiritual gifts as only coin, for our purpose), but surely the formalities and policies and decencies all vary with the nature of the thing trafficked for. If a man makes up his mind during half his life to acquire a Pitt-diamond or a Pilgrim-pearl—[he] gets witnesses and testimony and so forth—but, ...
— The Letters of Robert Browning and Elizabeth Barrett Barrett, Vol. 1 (of 2) 1845-1846 • Robert Browning and Elizabeth Barrett Barrett


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