0 suitable or right and expressing well the intended thought or feeling:
He summed up Jack's achievements in one or two felicitous phrases.
Both these criticisms can effectively be rebutted by specifying a felicitous feature of the universe other than fitness for humanity.
The combination of domestic arrangements with professional ambitions was not a felicitous one.
A biased felicitous condition would provide two referents for the noun that is modified by the relative clause.
For other choices, this interpretation is more natural, with the sentence judged felicitous out of context.
Mainly, the interview is not felicitous; the applicant does not make a favorable impression.
When the contexts are pragmatically felicitous, children behave like adults.
The aim of our analysis is indeed to explain what makes one genitive construction more felicitous than the competing one.
Because argument structure constructions are not synonymous, in any discourse context some constructions will be more felicitous and others will be less felicitous.