favour
Used to describe a significant act of kindness or help. The American English spelling is 'favor'.
Used to describe a significant act of kindness or help. The American English spelling is 'favor'.
Used to describe a very significant act of kindness or help. The American English spelling is 'favor'.
Used to describe a small act of kindness or help.
Used to describe a small act of kindness or help.
Can refer to a helpful act in a political context, or to general political approval.
Referring to having a high level of approval or support from someone.
Referring to having a very high level of approval or support, often in a formal or courtly context.
Refers to an act of a sexual nature, often requested or granted in exchange for something else.
To have a very definite preference for something.
To support or prefer something by a very large majority.
To support or prefer someone or something very much.
To be in agreement with or supporting a plan, idea, or person.
To act in a fair and impartial way, without being influenced by fear of powerful people or by the desire to please friends.
The most common way to say you are helping someone.
To do something for someone who has helped you in the past.
To do something for someone who has helped you in the past.
To succeed in getting approval or support.
To get approval or support.
To be liked or approved of by someone.
To praise someone, especially someone in authority, in a way that is not sincere, in order to get some advantage for yourself.
To try to get the approval of someone important by being pleasant.
A formal way to agree to do a favour for someone.
A formal way to say 'give a favour'.
To choose or prefer one person or thing more than another.