English to Nepalese Dictionary exigency

exigency

exigency
definition
noun
women worked long hours when the exigencies of the family economy demanded it
an urgent need or demand.
example
But the question of the foundation of value has simply been displaced: now it is my job that, in my active engagement, takes on the unquestioned 'exigency' of a demand or value.
Any proceedings against the press should be ‘confined, under the pressure of extreme necessity, to the occasional 'exigency' of some particular case’.
Financial 'exigency' , familial, societal and cultural pressures, and educational deficits force many minority law students to make hard choices about whether they should study law.
The investigating committee concluded that the administration had acted without demonstrating financial 'exigency' that mandated the termination of continuing appointments.
The innovative readings in this essay arise from the theoretical 'exigency' I mentioned as requisite these days.
he put financial 'exigency' before personal sentiment
Look, given the 'exigency' of the situation, my requirements must be fulfilled with utmost haste.
he put financial 'exigency' before personal sentiment
These standards call for meaningful participation by a faculty body in deciding whether a financial 'exigency' exists or is imminent.
Emergency powers are supposed to apply only while the 'exigency' persists.
Virtually all of the Administration's actions may well be held to be entirely constitutional, depending on the 'exigency' of the circumstances.
Financial 'exigency' could thus join seamlessly with reorganization to become an everyday occurrence.
In truth, the exemption of fishing craft is essentially an act of grace, and not a matter of right, and it is extended or denied as the 'exigency' is believed to demand.
But, resettlement is probably a much-needed 'exigency' in cases like the creation of inviolate areas to preserve habitats and wildlife, which in turn act as flagship species for the conservation of the eco-system.
They were the first two women in Australia to have actual careers in physics and it was because wartime 'exigencies' required that talented young women be hired.
The 'exigencies' of journalism demand instant appraisals and on-the-spot verdicts.
Leading advocates at times dropped it as they moved up, others picked it up and dropped it as political 'exigencies' demanded.
Modernizing or adapting the European welfare state to the 'exigencies' of external competition and the pressures of a changing industrial society at home is a much taller order.
In others, the judges have been prepared to be flexible to meet the 'exigencies' of the situation.
To practice is to draw on our creative energies and to respond to situational 'exigencies' with spontaneous acts of mindful and creative expression.
Nobody likes to be told that the 'exigencies' of life require them to find a sudden thousand quid, but that's not the whole of it.
Is it because the 'exigencies' of politics demand the assistance of the police?
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