English language

How to pronounce fairness in English?

Toggle Transcript
Type Words
Synonyms candor, candour, fair-mindedness
Type of nonpartisanship, impartiality
Type Words
Synonyms equity
Type of justness, justice
Has types sportsmanship, non-discrimination
Derivation fair


the judge recognized the fairness of my claim.
Type Words
Synonyms blondness, paleness
Type of skin color, complexion, skin colour
Derivation fair
Type Words
Synonyms beauteousness, comeliness, loveliness
Type of beauty
Derivation fair

Examples of fairness

fairness
In fairness, Klein and his allies are responding to a crisis long in the making.
From the forbes.com
In fairness to you white shoe lovers, there were some that came down the runway.
From the orlandosentinel.com
Truth, fairness, and justice have no place within the four walls of a courtroom.
From the kentucky.com
For fairness, schools are also compared against those with similar demographics.
From the sfgate.com
In fairness, they probably were too busy on the field to notice the empty seats.
From the newsday.com
In fairness, last year's Gators needed five games before an offensive explosion.
From the orlandosentinel.com
Tsvangirai wants regional leaders to ensure safety and fairness in the campaign.
From the washingtonpost.com
In all fairness, Peter O'Malley, 59, is a step up in class from his late father.
From the time.com
Income distribution is an outcome and fairness cannot be determined by outcomes.
From the washingtontimes.com
More examples
  • Conformity with rules or standards; "the judge recognized the fairness of my claim"
  • Ability to make judgments free from discrimination or dishonesty
  • Paleness: the property of having a naturally light complexion
  • Comeliness: the quality of being good looking and attractive
  • Fairness measures or metrics are used in network engineering to determine whether users or applications are receiving a fair share of system resources. There are several mathematical and conceptual definitions of fairness.
  • The property of being fair
  • A goal of Fair Information Practices, which requires a company to use personal information only for the purpose for which it was initially collected.
  • An administrative law principle. The "duty to be fair" means the medical adjudicator keeps an open mind in reviewing the evidence in a case and carefully reviews all of the evidence to determine if the person meets or continues to meet the "severe and prolonged" criteria. ...
  • A system included in SCSI-3 which prevents fast devices with a higher priority from "hogging" the bus and preventing devices with a lower priority from gaining control of the bus. Must be used if QAS is implemented.