English to Spanish Dictionary impractical

impractical

poco práctico
definition
adjective
impractical high heels
(of an object or course of action) not adapted for use or action; not sensible or realistic.
Urine tests for alcohol proved to be just as impractical in the field as blood sampling.
impossible to do; impracticable.
translation of 'impractical'
adjective
poco práctico,
desmañado
example
She is most like Marianne in temperament - romantic, 'impractical' , and loving.
My 'impractical' high heels are cradled in my bag, to be slipped on later.
It is generally 'impractical' to provide reservoir storage for extremely large and infrequent floods.
In a 1986 book, Matsunaga came up with a brilliant, idealistic, 'impractical' , and visionary idea.
It is obvious that it is generally 'impractical' for judges, as a result of their position, to personally counter political attacks.
It would be 'impractical' to ask to patients to assess their own night vision out of doors.
There is a tendency to be 'impractical' and too idealistic in your thinking.
In the end, however, mass evacuation was deemed 'impractical' .
He told me that he wanted to get me something silly, something completely 'impractical' .
Media interest has spiralled to the point that one-on-one interviews are 'impractical' .
The Kyoto Protocol was derided by some in the United States as a fantasy, 'impractical' to implement and unfair in that it did not enlist developing countries in this ‘global’ effort.
Academics are supposed to be the 'impractical' ones: the theorists.
He said their proposals were too widely drawn, 'impractical' and unworkable.
There is something about a person who covers themselves in impossibly 'impractical' cream clothes that says ‘I'm special, you're not; don't bother me’.
Pursuing art seemed 'impractical' , so he joined the family concrete block manufacturing business.
Melanie cleans office buildings hut dreams of a better life that Teddo, an idealistic and 'impractical' dreamer, cannot provide.
People who are smart but don't get things done often have PhDs and work in big companies where nobody listens to them because they are completely 'impractical' .
‘I found myself being called a tool of the Communists and an 'impractical' religious visionary,’ Ryan wrote.
Television chiefs had considered using a genuine Hindu temple in the city for filming, but realised it would be 'impractical' to take over a place of religious worship for an estimated six days.
It would have been 'impractical' for the Palace Theatre to contact all ticket holders in time for today's first performance, especially when it was not known what the problem was or whether it could be fixed until the engineer had arrived.
Such is the stereotype of the 'impractical' philosopher.
Was the idealism practiced by Nehru therefore 'impractical' ?
In practice, it proved 'impractical' to sustain all the original principles in this legislation, particularly the principle that a married couple would share a common nationality.
Today such a view would strike most people in the business as ridiculously 'impractical' .
There is much in the words and thoughts of the Romantic poets that is excessive or 'impractical' , but their beliefs and the passion with which they pursued them still serve as an example.
We hope he will join us in looking for realistic proposals to solve this problem instead of inventing 'impractical' schemes like some latter day Walter Mitty.
Urine tests for alcohol proved to be just as 'impractical' in the field as blood sampling.
A native of Los Angeles, Strawn is a great believer in ‘that little voice you hear inside’ that tells you to do things that seem at best 'impractical' , at worst crazy.
However, analyses of large samples are often 'impractical' due to the expense of individual genotyping.
Banning them would probably be 'impractical' ; pricing them off the road is eminently sensible.
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