![]() ![]() If you and your sister are in a big fight on a long car trip, you might resolve it through a reciprocal agreement that you'll stop poking her and she'll stop reading road signs out loud. I think it's more like 1/3 but I'm trying to give him credit. Reciprocal describes something that's the same on both sides. I will admit he has gotten some jobs done but just at max only 2/3 of them. Yet he barely sees his son and me and hasn't been home for dinner in 6 months because he is busy working. He has also claimed in the last year that by next year (so that'd be pretty much now, right?) he would have rebuilt a tractor, a snowplow, 2 trucks, a house trailer and a flat bed and he was going to build one, and a motorcycle, plus a 3 wheeler, 4 wheeler, help his dad with his house, get him and I a place.I could go on and on. Update: It can mean 'false accusation' and/or 'When somebody says that another did something (wrong) when they haven't'. I know what it means, and I don't find it fits the definition I wrote. Still has to fix his truck and put the new motor in it which he still has to drive 2 hours to get, even though he has a perfectly good one right here. What do we call 'a person who blames others for things they didn't do' I searched on the web, and found the word 'blamer'. He still has a heater here at my apartment left from 8 months ago that he was supposed to fix. He also has an odd job business, which doesn't get much business. ![]() My husband is a tow truck driver, so he barely has spare time as it is. But in relation to gentlemanliness, another abstract word, they are specific for courtesy, kindness, and bravery are specific elements of. What do you call someone who says they will do things but doesn't? And if they do it, they take 6 months rather than the 6 days they said they could but not necessarily specified that they would? ![]()
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