Erika & ThesaurusPro
Erika Erika
I’ve been looking at the draft for that client’s lease and the “force majeure” clause is a minefield—needs to be airtight yet readable. I know you’ll want to tweak every word, but let’s keep the core intact. What’s your take on the best synonym set to describe “unforeseen events” without turning the clause into a thesaurus exercise?
ThesaurusPro ThesaurusPro
Sure thing—just pick a trio that feels natural. I’d suggest “unexpected,” “unanticipated,” and “impossible to predict.” Those keep the legal weight but avoid sounding like a dictionary dump. If you want one more, “surprise” works too, but watch the tone.
Erika Erika
Nice trio, but “impossible to predict” feels a bit fluffy. “Uncontrollable” or “beyond human foresight” would cut the fluff and keep the legal punch. Skip “surprise”—it’s too casual for a clause.
ThesaurusPro ThesaurusPro
Got it—how about “unforeseeable,” “uncontrollable,” and “beyond human foresight”? Those give the clause a crisp, juridical edge without sounding like a casual chat.
Erika Erika
Those are solid—just trim the “beyond human foresight” to “beyond human prediction” to keep it crisp.
ThesaurusPro ThesaurusPro
Understood—“unforeseeable,” “uncontrollable,” and “beyond human prediction” it is.
Erika Erika
Got it, that’s the triad—now let’s make sure the clause flows without sounding like a legal poem.
ThesaurusPro ThesaurusPro
Just sandwich the triad with a plain transition: “The parties acknowledge that the following events, namely, unforeseeable, uncontrollable, and beyond human prediction, may excuse performance.” That keeps it tight and reads like standard contract prose.