[
UK
/kənsˈɪdəɹət/
]
[ US /kənˈsɪdɝət/ ]
[ US /kənˈsɪdɝət/ ]
ADJECTIVE
-
showing concern for the rights and feelings of others
friends considerate enough to leave us alone
How To Use considerate In A Sentence
- When I do get in a lather, it's never my fault: it's the cyclists and pedestrians who are selfish and inconsiderate, not me.
- Thereby, you will be able to navigate your way ahead, carefully picking your route around bloated wobbly people, inconsiderate ‘wallowers’ and arsey posers as they try to impress the girls.
- As though you really are the most inconsiderate people to ever live in the rental across from my home.
- Somehow that was considerate of them, but they still were wary.
- I think he's the most charming, most considerate man I've ever known.
- Their courage helped millions of people to be less condemnatory and more considerate.
- Schanzer's language bias is clearly demonstrated when he says that the "United Nations General Assembly partition plan ... endowed the Palestinian Arabs with a state that included an expanded Gaza strip, the West Bank, and much of the northern territory. [emphasis added]" How considerate for sure, to be "endowed" with only portions of your own homeland, while a minority of the population, immigrants at that, is given a majority of the land. Book Review - Hamas vs. Fatah
- I guess I always assumed as a child that if I was considerate of others and reasoned things out, people would do likewise to and for me.
- The chairman's statement is considerate of the diverse interests represented by the leaders in the meeting.
- Some complained about what they characterized as rude and inconsiderate behavior by the power company, which had the largest number of customers in the region still without power. For Pepco, customer wrath extends the storm