Warranted Meaning in English
word · lemma: warrant
ˈwɔɹəntɪd
WAWR-uhn-tid
wˈɒɹəntɪd
WOR-uhn-tid
Definition
If something is warranted, it is justified, deserved, or has good reasons for happening or being done.
Usage & Nuances
Formal and mainly written. Commonly used after verbs like 'consider', 'feel', or 'seem' (e.g., 'not warranted', 'fully warranted'). Often means 'made necessary' or 'reasonable'. Don't confuse with 'guaranteed'—'warranted' focuses on justification, not a promise.
Spanish: justificado - garantizado (contexto formal)Portuguese (BR): justificado - garantido (formal)Portuguese (PT): justificado - garantido (formal)Chinese (Simplified): 有根据的 - 正当的Chinese (Traditional): 有根據的 - 正當的Hindi: संगत - उचितArabic: مبرر - مضمون (سياق رسمي)Bengali: যৌক্তিক - সমর্থনযোগ্যRussian: обоснованный - оправданныйJapanese: 正当な - 妥当なVietnamese: hợp lý - chính đángKorean: 정당한 - 타당한Turkish: haklı - yerindeUrdu: جائز - مناسبIndonesian: dapat dibenarkan - beralasan
Example Sentences
The punishment was warranted because he broke the rules.
basic
His fears are warranted after what happened yesterday.
basic
Is all this attention really warranted?
basic
Her criticism wasn’t warranted; I did everything correctly.
natural
A little caution here is definitely warranted.
natural
If you ask me, the excitement isn’t really warranted.
natural