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balanced adjective [ ˈbalənst ]

• keeping or showing a balance; in good proportions.
• "she assembled a balanced team"

balance verb

• put (something) in a steady position so that it does not fall.
• "a mug that she balanced on her knee"
Similar: steady, stabilize, poise, level, prop, position,
• offset or compare the value of (one thing) with another.
• "the cost of obtaining such information needs to be balanced against its benefits"
Similar: weigh, weigh up, compare, evaluate, consider, assess, appraise, estimate,
• compare debits and credits in (an account) so as to ensure that they are equal.
• "the law requires the council to balance its books each year"
Origin: Middle English (in balance (sense 3 of the noun)): from Old French balance (noun), balancer (verb), based on late Latin (libra) bilanx ‘(balance) having two scale pans’, from bi- ‘twice, having two’ + lanx ‘scale pan’.

on balance

• when all factors are taken into consideration.
• "on balance, he was pleased with how things had gone"
Similar: overall, all in all, all things considered, by and large, on average, for the most part, mostly, mainly, in the main, on the whole, in general, generally, generally speaking, largely, to a large extent, to a great degree,


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