pragmatical การใช้
- Such high hopes have now to be curtailed by what many leaders call practical or pragmatical thoughts.
- The conflict between the characters came from the collision between poetic and pragmatical, grand and common, irrational and rational.
- Sample sizes for data collection are often a compromise between the statistical validity of the results and pragmatical issues around data collection.
- Governor Vera thus adopted a pragmatical equilibrium stance between Artigas and Buenos Aires, prioritizing the interests of the province rather than ideological concerns.
- His son, Alauddin, would go on to found the Sultanate of Johor, and develop more or less pragmatical relations with the Portuguese.
- Damned if you do, damned if you don't, so just leaving things in history was, in general, the more pragmatical choice.
- A certain long-running musical had lots of singable names for the animals that purr and meow : practical cats, dramatical cats, pragmatical cats, fanatical cats.
- However, in 50 years time, if and when global warming is rearing its ugly head, practical and pragmatical will be the last words historians use to describe present day leaders.
- The original provisions of the " devise " have been described as bizarre and obsessive and as typical of a teenager, while incompatible with the mind and needs of a pragmatical politician.
- "Casanova in Love " might well have been called " Casanova in England, " for it records a conversion to the recalcitrant, ambient real, for all the world as if the country itself were a kind of pragmatical penance.
- The simplest way to explain the Warring states period is : there were a heap of local warlords ( daimyo ) and they pretty much fought free-for-all battles against each other, with alliances being fragile and entirely pragmatical arrangements and with the institute of Shogunate put on hold between Ashikaga and Tokugawa and the imperial court being a pretty much non-entity ( ruling out the Shogunate vs . Imperial battles you mention-perhaps you thought of the Meiji restoration where such a battle really took place ? ).
- Maturin enters actively into the humor of fractured proverbs by the eighth novel, " The Ionian Mission ", as shown in this exchange between the two friends in Chapter 10 :'Why, as to that,'said Jack, blowing on his coffee-cup and staring out of the stern-window at the harbour,'as to that . . . if you do not choose to call him a pragmatical clinchpoop and kick his breech, which you might think ungenteel, perhaps you could tell him to judge the pudding by its fruit . " You mean, prove the tree by its eating . " No, no, Stephen, you are quite out : eating a tree would prove nothing.