English to Kannada Dictionary didactic

didactic

ನೀತಿಬೋಧಕ
definition
adjective
a didactic novel that set out to expose social injustice
intended to teach, particularly in having moral instruction as an ulterior motive.
example
If the Reformation chorales were anything, they were 'didactic' and homiletical.
Leake used 'didactic' approaches to teach the surveyors how to administer questionnaires and register oral responses.
He became more aggressive and personal, more 'didactic' , more accusatory, more moralistic.
This individual could provide much of the 'didactic' instruction, but others should contribute to the training program.
In West Africa, 'didactic' tales and tales of magic with moral endings are very popular.
Otherwise, I would have created only 'didactic' films for educational television.
A more 'didactic' type of prose, designed to inform and convince, was practised by Arnold, Carlyle, Macaulay, and others.
It's heavy stuff, but the idea-rich tale unfolds its philosophy in a way that manages to neatly skirt pedantic style and 'didactic' tone.
She had an unpleasantly loud 'didactic' voice.
One implication of the classical approach to moral education is that law has a 'didactic' element.
The clinical curriculum is intended to apply 'didactic' content into the patient care setting and promote critical thinking.
Because of the public funding, there was a conservative style and often a moral or 'didactic' message in the films that were made at the Film Board.
The Korean tale, thus, has a stronger 'didactic' and moral character than similar tales.
Those who like to be instructed may relish this part of the novel; others may find it annoyingly 'didactic' .
Thank you for a rewarding educational, 'didactic' , competitive memorable week!
Bad poetry, sure, but still poetry - a more loose-textured, less 'didactic' literary form than the rant.
This 'didactic' approach towards teaching history has made people look at it as a pain rather than a joy.
I concur with Gurney's approach: Jacki's competent focus is neither 'didactic' nor moralising.
It is history as it should be: entertaining without being glib, informative without being 'didactic' .
Although the prose is clear and readable it is also assertive, 'didactic' and sometimes patronising.
The training consisted of 'didactic' instruction and observation of live family therapy sessions.
But the narrative remains strange and poetic enough for it never to appear formulaic or 'didactic' .
Robert Coles's sketch about his fifth-grade teacher is tiresomely 'didactic' .
To my editorial consternation, he has no objection to being seen as 'didactic' in his novels.
In order not to sound too 'didactic' or pedantic, the lecturer added anecdotes and personal comments.
He is still as purposefully 'didactic' as ever, using the genre of educational information posters to inform us of our own miseducation.
Both clinical and 'didactic' courses were taught primarily by pharmacy faculty, and rarely by medicine faculty.
While these and other sociopolitical themes inform her writing, Hansen's books are not 'didactic' .
The books written by Richardson and his followers accordingly became known as moral or 'didactic' novels.
You could probably even sneak in your revolutionary politics without sounding 'didactic' and patronizing.
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