to be a good neighbour

  • 1Good Neighbour Policy — The Good Neighbour Policy is an agreement amongst horse racing jurisdictions that they shall not provide betting on horse racing to residents of other signatory jurisdictions without the permission of that signatory jurisdiction, nor solicit,… …

    Wikipedia

  • 2Good Neighbour Policy — Popular name for the policy toward Latin America pursued in the 1930s by Pres. Franklin D. Roosevelt. In a marked departure from its traditional interventionism, which was abhorrent to Latin Americans, the U.S. repudiated its assumed right to… …

    Universalium

  • 3Good Neighbour Policy — Die Good Neighbor Policy (deutsch Politik der guten Nachbarschaft) war eine von den USA unter Franklin D. Roosevelt bis etwa 1937/1938 betriebene Politik gegenüber den lateinamerikanischen Staaten, die sich durch Respekt gegenüber diesen Staaten… …

    Deutsch Wikipedia

  • 4Good Neighbour Sam —    Voir Prête moi ton mari …

    Dictionnaire mondial des Films

  • 5Good Neighbour Councils — plural noun voluntary bodies, established by the federal government in 1949 and abandoned in the late 1970s; aimed to assist in migrant integration …

  • 6good neighbour — …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 7good — /good/, adj., better, best, n., interj., adv. adj. 1. morally excellent; virtuous; righteous; pious: a good man. 2. satisfactory in quality, quantity, or degree: a good teacher; good health. 3. of high quality; excellent. 4. right; proper; fit:… …

    Universalium

  • 8good-neighbor — also (chiefly British English) good neighbour, adj. phrase, in reference to U.S. foreign policy, especially in Latin America, 1928, originally in Herbert Hoover. The good neighbours is Scottish euphemism for the fairies (1580s) …

    Etymology dictionary

  • 9neighbour — (BrE) (AmE neighbor) noun 1 person living nearby ADJECTIVE ▪ friendly, good ▪ She s been a very good neighbour to me. ▪ nosy ▪ noisy …

    Collocations dictionary

  • 10neighbour —    Formerly in common use to a person of either sex who lived in close proximity, often followed by a surname, ‘neighbour’ is no longer used vocatively. Shakespearean characters regularly call one another ‘neighbour’: honest neighbour, good… …

    A dictionary of epithets and terms of address