In fortunate circumstances financially; moderately rich.
Sinônimos
Examples for "easy"
Examples for "easy"
1It is far too easy to blame 'special events' for curbing growth.
2The investing process from there was fairly easy: long Japan, short France.
3However, enforcement isn't always a given and tourists still remain easy targets.
4Of course, just because the choice is clear doesn't mean it's easy.
5Young people say pornography is too easy to watch in New Zealand.
1Try different hand orientations; a good jam should feel secure and comfortable.
2For companies, high returns attract new entrants who threaten incumbents' comfortable state.
3He quickly changed the subject back to a more comfortable topic: war.
4Masha's Hebrew is now quite good; Volodya is more comfortable with English.
5However, this means the pen is actually pen-sized and comfortable to hold.
1Those who work at the market are among Katine's more prosperous citizens.
2Cameron says he wants to build a prosperous future for Northern Ireland.
3Definitely steer clear of affluent Switzerland, particularly the prosperous city of Lausanne.
4Isis-first tactics risk losing the much greater prize, a stable, prosperous Turkey.
5It was Fra Palamone in the flesh-andin great and prosperous flesh.
1Radiology showed well-fixed implants, no dislocation and no apparent polyethylene wear.
2That is just what the well-fixed Bachelor decided to do.
3One afternoon she had a nice visit with her friend Eileen Carter, a well-fixed spinster.
4One hundred percent of femoral stems and 98% of acetabular components were well-fixed at last followup.
5You had done too much for me already, Pat; and though I supposed you were well-fixed I had no idea you were wealthy.
1Yes, the house was larger and catered to a more well-heeled clientele.
2Fund III raised money from well-heeled investors like pension funds and endowments.
3In fairness, Quora users are not the final arbiters on well-heeled jerk-dom.
4Anything and everything was available here for its very well-heeled European patrons.
5Cartel's sojourn in the bubble naturally involves a couple of well-heeled brands.
1At certain levels, house prices simply become unaffordable, even to the well-off.
2These measure different aspects of SEP independent of FAS and family well-off.
3Results: Moderate correlations existed between occupational scales and FAS and family well-off.
4But recently published data suggests that users are pretty well-off in Mzansi.
5Instinctively, some presume well-off frequent flyers are deserving victims of aviation taxes.
1I'd like a house that's well-situated and open to the light, he said.
2Khaya Ndlovu Manor House This well-situated camp provides a gateway into the Greater Kruger.
3In an hour and a half we arrived at his fine and well-situated castle.
4They were well-situated on high, rocky ground, but the terrain offered few advantages at the moment.
5He might even seek some well-situated Eastern church.
1The project has caused much bitterness among well-to-do Jews in the area.
2Sophie was the daughter of a well-to-do worker in wood near Amsterdam.
3Why do well-to-do church members oppose laws against child labour so bitterly?
4The latter are the best, and are inhabited by the well-to-do classes.
5Formerly they were well-to-do; but now they live on mushrooms and ants.
6You're a dear little well-to-do father, and the best in the world.
7There's a certain sameness in the interior decor preferences of today's well-to-do.
8Home discipline and training of manners were ignored, even in well-to-do families.
9Travel was slow and expensive and something only the well-to-do could afford.
10The sons of well-to-do families rubbed shoulders with colliers and farm labourers.
11Kirwan was born to a well-to-do family in Co Galway in 1733.
12The Morgans, besides, had been well-to-do in Connecticut since the seventeenth century.
13Weil was born in 1909 into a well-to-do family of Parisian Jews.
14On one extreme was the well-to-do yeoman farmer farming his own land.
15I was born thirty years ago, the son of fairly well-to-do landowners.
16This poet was Alexander Pope, the son of a well-to-do Catholic linen-draper.