0 rich:
Her family was very well off.
[ before noun ] a well-off neighbourhood
1 having a lot of or a number of:
3 wealthy
4 rich:
Finance firms are concentrating on the well-off.
Such epistemically well-off exclusivists may be rare, but it is important not to ignore those on the margins with our principles.
Is it fair to ask less well-off taxpayers to fund the greater convenience of services for those whose needs are least?
Arrangements where net flows of support are downward are dominated by well-off older people : being rich (kaya) entailed responsibilities for children and grandchildren.
Eventually, the lack of ability to adjust the houses to changing standards caused neighbourhood aging and the departure of well-off residents.
However, polarisation was not substantial and the attitudes of the well-off were still quite positive towards the welfare state.
Resistance to democratic decentralisation certainly plays a role in the power-retaining strategies of some well-off actors within the central state sphere.
Broad-based screening for cystic fibrosis and for other prevalent genetic diseases is thus jeopardized, because only educated and financially well-off individuals are utilizing it.
One might object that there are epistemically well-off exclusivists adhering to different religions.