Depending on the circumstances, agreements may be made with different intentions. In some circumstances, the parties may intend that the performance of an agreement will rely on notions of honour, goodwill, affection, mutual advantage, or peer pressure, but they do not intend that their agreement should be enforceable by bringing an action in the courts.
In other circumstances, people enter agreements with an intention that any failure to perform the agreement will involve legal consequences and that they will be able to enforce their agreement by bringing an action in court. It is this type of agreement that is properly called a contract.
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