- common: common to or shared by two or more parties; "a common friend"; "the mutual interests of management and labor"
- reciprocal: concerning each of two or more persons or things; especially given or done in return; "reciprocal aid"; "reciprocal trade"; "mutual respect"; "reciprocal privileges at other clubs"
- (mutuality) a reciprocal relation between interdependent entities (objects or individuals or groups)
- (mutually) in a mutual or shared manner; "the agreement was mutually satisfactory"; "the goals of the negotiators were not reciprocally exclusive"
- (mutualness) mutuality: a reciprocality of sentiments; "the mutuality of their affection was obvious"
- (Mutuals) A mutual, mutual organization, or mutual society is an organization (which is often, but not always, a company or business) based on the principle of mutuality. ...
- A mutual fund etc; Having the same relationship, each to each other; Reciprocal; Possessed in common; Relating to a form of mutual insurance or financial institution
- (Mutuality) Above all else, 'mutuality' refers to the focus on the RELATIONSHIP between two people, regardless of who is the 'giver' and who is the 'receiver' of support at a given time. ...
- (MUTUALITY) All debts and obligations of Buyer and Boise to each other are mutual and subject to setoff. ...
- (Mutuality) Can loosely be translated as 'matching;' if one party wants to claim specific performance then the other party must have been able to match this by claiming specific performance himself (it is not necessary that the other party does actually claim specific performance, just that he ...
- (Mutuality) The binding of both parties in every contract.
- (Mutuality) The concept in RCT suggesting that we grow toward an increased capacity for respect, having an impact on the other, and being open to being changed by the other. ...
- (Mutuality) a term adopted by the NHS to describe the Scottish Government's new approach to the delivery of health services in Scotland and described by Nicola Sturgeon in the foreword to Better Health, Better Care (Scottish Government, 2007) which states "...A mutual NHS is more than an idea... ...
- (mutuality) The common goals of the students.
- (Mutuals) Take many forms: credit unions, co-operatives, building societies, employee-owned businesses. They are organised by their members, who band together with the common purpose of providing a shared service from which they all benefit.
- The Church's auxiliary organization for youth ages twelve through eighteen, for many years called the Mutual Improvement Association, or MIA.
- adj. felt or done by each towards the other
- A weekly youth activities evening, held on a ward (congregation) basis for teenage Church member and their friends.
- A cooperative not financed by the Rural Electrification Administration.
- Price paid on a winning pari-mutuel wager
- A social activity for Young Men and Young Women held in the evening once per month.
- The term mutual denotes a company that is owned by its policyholders instead of by stockholders. These companies return part of their profits to policyholders as dividends.
- Tagging a player at the same time they tag you.
- A mutual organisation is owned by its members and not by shareholders.
- intelligibility can be asymmetric between the languages, with speakers of one understanding more of the other than speakers of the other understand of the first.