These are the meanings of the letters SUBJECTIFY when you unscramble them.
- Justice (a.)
A person duly commissioned to hold courts, or to try and decide controversies and administer justice.
- Justice (a.)
Agreeableness to right; equity; justness; as, the justice of a claim.
- Justice (a.)
Conformity to truth and reality in expressing opinions and in conduct; fair representation of facts respecting merit or demerit; honesty; fidelity; impartiality; as, the justice of a description or of a judgment; historical justice.
- Justice (a.)
The quality of being just; conformity to the principles of righteousness and rectitude in all things; strict performance of moral obligations; practical conformity to human or divine law; integrity in the dealings of men with each other; rectitude; equity; uprightness.
- Justice (a.)
The rendering to every one his due or right; just treatment; requital of desert; merited reward or punishment; that which is due to one's conduct or motives.
- Justice (v. t.)
To administer justice to.
- Justify (a.)
To make even or true, as lines of type, by proper spacing; to adjust, as type. See Justification, 4.
- Justify (a.)
To pronounce free from guilt or blame; to declare or prove to have done that which is just, right, proper, etc.; to absolve; to exonerate; to clear.
- Justify (a.)
To prove or show to be just; to vindicate; to maintain or defend as conformable to law, right, justice, propriety, or duty.
- Justify (a.)
To prove; to ratify; to confirm.
- Justify (a.)
To treat as if righteous and just; to pardon; to exculpate; to absolve.
- Justify (v. i.)
To form an even surface or true line with something else; to fit exactly.
- Justify (v. i.)
To take oath to the ownership of property sufficient to qualify one's self as bail or surety.
- Subject (a.)
Exposed; liable; prone; disposed; as, a country subject to extreme heat; men subject to temptation.
- Subject (a.)
Hence, that substance or being which is conscious of its own operations; the mind; the thinking agent or principal; the ego. Cf. Object, n., 2.
- Subject (a.)
Obedient; submissive.
- Subject (a.)
Placed or situated under; lying below, or in a lower situation.
- Subject (a.)
Placed under the power of another; specifically (International Law), owing allegiance to a particular sovereign or state; as, Jamaica is subject to Great Britain.
- Subject (a.)
Specifically: One who is under the authority of a ruler and is governed by his laws; one who owes allegiance to a sovereign or a sovereign state; as, a subject of Queen Victoria; a British subject; a subject of the United States.
- Subject (a.)
That in which any quality, attribute, or relation, whether spiritual or material, inheres, or to which any of these appertain; substance; substratum.
- Subject (a.)
That of which anything is affirmed or predicated; the theme of a proposition or discourse; that which is spoken of; as, the nominative case is the subject of the verb.
- Subject (a.)
That which is brought under thought or examination; that which is taken up for discussion, or concerning which anything is said or done.
- Subject (a.)
That which is placed under the authority, dominion, control, or influence of something else.
- Subject (a.)
That which is subjected, or submitted to, any physical operation or process; specifically (Anat.), a dead body used for the purpose of dissection.
- Subject (a.)
The person who is treated of; the hero of a piece; the chief character.
- Subject (n.)
The incident, scene, figure, group, etc., which it is the aim of the artist to represent.
- Subject (n.)
The principal theme, or leading thought or phrase, on which a composition or a movement is based.
- Subject (v. t.)
To bring under control, power, or dominion; to make subject; to subordinate; to subdue.
- Subject (v. t.)
To cause to undergo; as, to subject a substance to a white heat; to subject a person to a rigid test.
- Subject (v. t.)
To expose; to make obnoxious or liable; as, credulity subjects a person to impositions.
- Subject (v. t.)
To make subservient.
- Subject (v. t.)
To submit; to make accountable.