Similar to "true" or "good point" or "an astute observation"
Chatter 1: Homeland is often implausible.
Chatter 2: Fair.
73π 41π
A phrase which should mean something but rarely does when it's used by sports players - especially British soccer players - and radio/TV commentators. You think the speaker is about to offer a balanced point of view - e.g. "I know I'm critical of X, but, to be fair, he is recovering from a bad injury", but most times, they're just trotting out the same dumb platitudes to fill airtime. Interchangeable with "at the end of the day" and "as I say".
To be fair, it is a Wednesday.
To be fair, as I say, I'm talking into a microphone at the end of the day, Gary
84π 52π
A phrase that precedes a series of statements that, taken as a whole, are completely incorrect. This phase is commonly bandied about on a certain prestigious law school forum, populated by only a handful of people who happen each to have more than a dozen aliases, giving them the false impression that they're actually socializing.
Law School Poster: OMG top 1% at HYS. chances at WLRK?
To Be Fair: To be fair,
You shouldn't have gone to law school in the first place.
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Not to be confused with equal.
Annoying Kid: That's not fair! Why don't I get candy?
Realist Kid: You know it's cuz that person knows you're annoying. That's very fair.
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I often laugh when someone declares a thing to be fair. Fairness is a funny illusion. Itβs one of our most useful illusions, but itβs an illusion nonetheless.
My mother gave me a fucking scooter while she gave my little sister a new Cobalt. No fairness in that.
23π 15π
Irish slang for "To be honest"
"Did you go gattin at the weekend?"
"Nahh I'm sick of it now in fairness like"
14π 8π
form of starting an explanation.
another term generally used around the music btec regions of stratford.
'To be fair your mom is quite fit, she'd get it
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