unwisdom การใช้
- He suggests the term " unwisdom " to be a better rendition.
- Any old dog about the house will soon show him the unwisdom of biting big dogs'ears.
- Above all, teach by example; stay calm, point out the unwisdom of others calmly, politely.
- According to this text the Buddha criticized this notion : " Truly the Baka Brahm is covered with unwisdom ."
- In their infinite unwisdom, two competing industry factions have come up with incompatible standards for rewriteable disks, and DVD-II players cannot read either of them.
- In an allegorical painting, the figure may be counterpoised to Prudence, representing a choice, or alone, representing the unwisdom of the actors in the painting.
- Nationalist and Unionists were called upon to recognise " the unwisdom of perpetuating a suicidal strife " which sacrificed them to religious bigotry and the political exigencies of English partie.
- The British writer Robert Graves describes the 1595 expedition in his historical novel, " The Islands of Unwisdom ", written in 1949 . In its introduction he describes his sources.
- He further mentioned that at the time of Vivekananda people of India were shrouded in " tamas ", ignorance and unwisdom, and failed to distinguish between weakness and non-attachment and peace.
- Perhaps it was unwise of her to email journalists but if Walcott's past is " irrelevant to his suitability to fill the post of Professor of Poetry ", so is Padel's " unwisdom ".
- Rather, as Churchill put it as the theme of his work, it was the fault of " " the English-speaking peoples, [ who ], through their unwisdom, carelessness, and good nature allowed the wicked to rearm . ""
- Moreover, Murray is by no means dumb enough to expect the majority of reasonably well-informed Americans to fail to recognize the academically embroidered tapestry of pseudo-science as anything other than the patchwork of discarded speculation and old-hat conventional unwisdom that it is.
- See TVA v . Hill, 437 U . S . 153, 194 ( 1978 ) ( " Our individual appraisal of the wisdom or unwisdom of a particular course consciously selected by the Congress is to be put aside in the process of interpreting a statute " ).
- Mackay Radio had argued that it was not at fault for the failed contract talks, but Justice Roberts concluded that was irrelevant . " The wisdom or unwisdom " of the union's decision to strike did not matter; all that mattered was that a current labor dispute existed.
- He wrote that he believed " that the campaign for securing out of Germany the general costs of the war was one of the most serious acts of political unwisdom for which our statesmen have ever been responsible ", and called the treaty a " Carthaginian peace " that would economically affect all of Europe.
- "Foucault's Pendulum " was a game, but gimpy, search for a nonexistent treasure buried by the Knights Templar; " The Island of the Day Before " was a South Seas fantasy that owed a good deal to Robert Graves'" The Isles of Unwisdom ."
- The diminution in the receipts from second-class passengers, which was one of the results, was regarded by some authorities as a sign of the unwisdom of his action, but to him it appeared a sufficient reason for the abolition of second-class carriages, which therefore disappeared from the Midland system in 1875, the first-class fares being at the same time substantially reduced.
- He stated : " I believe that the campaign for securing out of Germany the general costs of the war was one of the most serious acts of political unwisdom for which our statesmen have ever been responsible . " Keynes had been the principal representative of the British Treasury at the Paris Peace Conference, and used in his passionate book arguments that he and others ( including some US officials ) had used at Paris.
- In a May 1945 leader, Carr blasted those who felt that an Anglo-American " special relationship'would be the principal bulwark of peace, writing that : " It would be the height of unwisdom to assume that an alliance of the English-speaking world, even it were to find favour with American opinion could form by itself the all-sufficient pillar of world security and render superfluous any other foundation for British policy in Europe . " As a result of Carr's leaders, the " Times " became popularly known during World War II as the three pence Barrington-Ward and Ted Carr together and throw them into the Thames ."