19 adjectives to describe understood

For, when the mind labours under any such feelings, expressions are apt to be used which, whether they are well understood or ill understood, give umbrage elsewhere, and endanger the peace as well as the policy, in a word, all the highest interests of the country.

* * INDEPENDENCE Is the word, of all others, that Irishmen, women, and childrenleast understand; and the calmness, or rather indifference, with which they submit to dependence, bitter and miserable as it is, must be a source of deep regret to all "who love the land," or feel anxious to uphold the dignity of human kind.

You're a clever fellowyou'd understand at once.

Mr. Errol, surely you are generous enoughchivalrous enoughto understand.

His comprehension of the meaning of music, as a prophetic or historical voice which few souls utter and fewer understand, is clear and vivid: he renders it thus, with whatever mastery of the mere material part he may possess, fingering, dramatic effects, etc.: these are but means to him, not an end, as with most artists.

Nor can one who has not the foolish, romantic, nervous, high-strung, artistic temperament understand from within Poland's national history.

Mr. Errol, surely you are generous enoughchivalrous enoughto understand.

let me gently Uplift and hold thee in my hand; Thou gazest on me so intently, Thou must my motive understand.

Nor can one who has not the foolish, romantic, nervous, high-strung, artistic temperament understand from within Poland's national history.

and, if he meant to parse the word syntactically, he should have added: "and agrees with its nominative thou understood; according to the rule which says, 'Every finite verb must agree with its subject or nominative, in person and number.'

Nor can one who has not the foolish, romantic, nervous, high-strung, artistic temperament understand from within Poland's national history.

"That's more than I knowbut, living or dead, the man must have a sowl, ye understand, Nicholas.

and, if he meant to parse the word syntactically, he should have added: "and agrees with its nominative thou understood; according to the rule which says, 'Every finite verb must agree with its subject or nominative, in person and number.'

Dick Sand made a gesture of salutation, which doubtless the unknown understood, for, after some hesitation, he continued to advance.

How was she to make this poor, untutored child understand.

Yet I seem to feel that thou wilt understand, though it be in the very matter of our difference.

Yet if thou knewest him thou wouldst understand.

But the supposing of an antecedent understood, is here unavoidable; because the preposition to cannot govern the nominative case, and the word whoever cannot be an objective.

"That's more than I knowbut, living or dead, the man must have a sowl, ye understand, Nicholas.

19 adjectives to describe  understood