English to Spanish Dictionary pragmatic

pragmatic

pragmático
definition
adjective
a pragmatic approach to politics
dealing with things sensibly and realistically in a way that is based on practical rather than theoretical considerations.
translation of 'pragmatic'
adjective
entrometido,
práctico,
pragmático,
dogmático
example
I know I am recommending a 'pragmatic' rather than a principled stand, but that is what national interest and foreign policy is all about.
Some Pascalians propose combining 'pragmatic' and epistemic factors in a two-stage process.
However, the spokesperson said the board would take a practical and 'pragmatic' approach to prosecutions.
This is how what linguists term 'pragmatic' markers have arisen in languages worldwide.
The upshot of this point of view is an activist or 'pragmatic' conception of mind and knowledge.
He was highly practical and would come up with 'pragmatic' solutions on various issues.
This policy was based on two 'pragmatic' considerations, and no guerilla organisation would overlook these.
But some 'pragmatic' strategists fear that his voting record in Congress may be a bit too liberal.
On the contrary, syntax is indispensable for a 'pragmatic' language and pragmatics is indispensable for a syntactic language.
The whirlwind tour was meant to humanize the low-cost leviathan so often depicted as self-serving and ruthlessly 'pragmatic' .
I discuss in relation to cross-cultural spoken and written data two such features, and argue that they may well lead to some form of 'pragmatic' failure.
Twinned to his 'pragmatic' , populist social democracy has been a maddening Trotskyite temperament.
Thus his apparent liberality on this question rested on 'pragmatic' considerations rather than on principle.
But these 'pragmatic' matters have nothing to do with fundamental determinism.
But for all his intellectual gifts, his kingship was essentially 'pragmatic' .
As I read history, most of the founders were sensible and 'pragmatic' men rather than visionary idealists.
Would not a semantically empty text, keeping only the 'pragmatic' skeleton of a conventional letter, aptly embody the artificiality of such letters?
As a philosopher, he was known for offering a commonsense, 'pragmatic' approach to those theoretical issues that he knew required clarity.
He praised the practical and 'pragmatic' approach of the college in developing a curriculum of courses designed to help students get on in the workplace.
This is a programme that any 'pragmatic' centre-right government could be proud of.
Indeed, for a 'pragmatic' libertarian, the political landscape out there is pretty depressing at the moment.
The lesson has certainly helped me rethink my politics and become more 'pragmatic' and realistic in terms of our own struggle.
Nationalist fundamentalism as a basis for French policy gave way to 'pragmatic' intergovernmentalism.
All 'pragmatic' or practical considerations have been set aside: the only question at issue is whether his beliefs about the world are true.
Another aspect to this 'pragmatic' understanding of American federalism is apparent in times of national crisis.
They are doing the right thing for once, so I'm not going to knock them because their reasons are 'pragmatic' rather than ideological.
The Democrats decided they needed a different, more 'pragmatic' approach in order to win.
He saw the 'pragmatic' account of meaning as a method for clearing up metaphysics and aiding scientific inquiry.
Unfortunately, while it is eminently 'pragmatic' , that doesn't mean that it's actually morally right.
Furthermore, they generate the same 'pragmatic' implicatures.
Credits: Google Translate
Download the
HelloEnglishApp
image_one