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Just   /dʒəst/  /dʒɪst/   Listen
Just

adverb
1.
And nothing more.  Synonyms: but, merely, only, simply.  "It is simply a matter of time" , "Just a scratch" , "He was only a child" , "Hopes that last but a moment"
2.
Indicating exactness or preciseness.  Synonyms: exactly, precisely.  "It was just as he said--the jewel was gone" , "It has just enough salt"
3.
Only a moment ago.  Synonym: just now.  "The sun just now came out"
4.
Absolutely.  Synonym: simply.  "He was just grand as Romeo" , "It's simply beautiful!"
5.
Only a very short time before.  Synonyms: barely, hardly, scarce, scarcely.  "We hardly knew them" , "Just missed being hit" , "Had scarcely rung the bell when the door flew open" , "Would have scarce arrived before she would have found some excuse to leave"
6.
Exactly at this moment or the moment described.
adjective
1.
Used especially of what is legally or ethically right or proper or fitting.  "A kind and just man" , "A just reward" , "His just inheritance"  Antonym: unjust.
2.
Fair to all parties as dictated by reason and conscience.  Synonym: equitable.  "An equitable distribution of gifts among the children"  Antonym: inequitable.
3.
Free from favoritism or self-interest or bias or deception; conforming with established standards or rules.  Synonym: fair.  "Fair deal" , "On a fair footing" , "A fair fight" , "By fair means or foul"  Antonym: unfair.
4.
Of moral excellence.  Synonyms: good, upright.  "A just cause" , "An upright and respectable man"



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WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Just" Quotes from Famous Books



... way but had not been accompanied by the feeling of enmity. It is by no means certain that a secure and complete community life would always result if these energies should disappear which, looked at in detail, seem repulsive and destructive, just as a qualitatively unchanged and richer property results when unproductive elements disappear; but there would ensue rather a condition as changed, and often as unrealizable, as after the elimination of the forces of co-operation—sympathy, ...
— Introduction to the Science of Sociology • Robert E. Park

... trying to escape. He came to an aged couple, who hid him in their cabin and shared their humble food with him. They gave him some corn-bread, bacon, and coffee which he thought was made of scorched bran. But he said that he never ate a meal that he relished more than the one he took with them. Just before he went they knelt down and prayed with him. It seemed as if his very hair stood on his head, their prayer was so solemn. As he was going away the man took some shingles and nailed them on his shoes to throw the bloodhounds ...
— Iola Leroy - Shadows Uplifted • Frances E.W. Harper

... which body he was elected a member in 1903) and elsewhere, proves that his skill with the brush is no less than with pen or pencil. The present volume includes, besides the drawing of Tony Weller just referred to, his picture of "The Warrener," another fine character-study, exhibited at the Royal Institute in 1907. "The Introduction," an example of a "time sketch" done at the London Sketch Club, illustrates the quick readiness with which the artist nimbly catches the spirit of his subject, ...
— Frank Reynolds, R.I. • A.E. Johnson

... what I could to cheer her up, and went out to find Hannibal just leaving the doctor, and ready to laugh at the wounds upon his arms as being too trifling to be worthy of notice. In fact the pains he suffered did not prevent him from partaking of a hearty meal, at which ...
— Mass' George - A Boy's Adventures in the Old Savannah • George Manville Fenn

... outrageous hand; And hoped to find in some propitious hour A feeling creature subject to his power. Peter had heard there were in London then, - Still have they being!—workhouse-clearing men, Who, undisturb'd by feelings just or kind, Would parish-boys to needy tradesmen bind: They in their want a trifling sum would take, And toiling slaves of piteous orphans make. Such Peter sought, and when a lad was found, The sum was dealt him, and the slave was bound. Some few in town observed in ...
— The Borough • George Crabbe


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