See Also: contract(encyclopedia)
Contract(law)
Take and pay contract(finance)
contract(dictionary)
Contract(health)
contract(1)(dictionary)
contract(2)(dictionary)
contract 3,(dictionary)
pre-contract(1)(dictionary)
pre-contract(2)(dictionary)

luscious (iou) and Contract (law)


luscious (iou)



luscious adjective & noun. LME.
[Perh. alt. of shortened form of DELICIOUS. Cf. also LUSH adjective.]
Richly sweet in taste or smell; colloq. delicious. LME.
A. G. Gardiner Pears that..melted rich and luscious in the mouth. Juliette Huxley Fellows comfortably digested their luscious meal.
Excessively sweet, cloying, sickly; (esp. of language or literary style) overrich in sound, imagery, or voluptuous suggestion. M16.
T. Birch A luscious Style stuffed with gawdy Metaphors and Fancy. Hazlitt A stream of luscious panegyrics. M. Donovan Without the addition of water..the resulting Wine would be luscious and heavy.
Orig., appealing to a lascivious taste, salacious, voluptuous. Later, voluptuously attractive, sexually desirable. E17.
Pope Cantharides..Whose use old Bards describe in luscious rhymes. E. Pizzey A mole..highlighted her luscious mouth.
lusciously adverb M16.
lusciousness noun L16.

Contract (law)



An agreement between two or more persons that creates an obligation to do or not to do a particular thing.










Others:






A legally binding agreement involving two or more people or businesses which states what the parties will or will not do.







Others:


An agreement between two or more persons to do or not to do a particular thing a meeting of the minds with a consideration.







Others:


An agreement between two or more parties in which an offer is made and accepted, and each party benefits. The agreement can be formal, informal, written, oral or just plain understood. Some contracts are required to be in Writing in order to be enforced.