English to Telugu Dictionary simplistic

simplistic

సాధారణ
definition
adjective
simplistic solutions
treating complex issues and problems as if they were much simpler than they really are.
example
He treated us as children, he told us a 'simplistic' fairy story laced with cheap flattery.
That is not a threat; it is the reality of treating a complex issue in a very 'simplistic' way.
Drug misuse is too complex a problem to be solved with a 'simplistic' , zero tolerance approach.
I know it is 'simplistic' , but I wish everyone, everywhere, could live harmoniously.
I know that naive and 'simplistic' but I just feel that while these trees and plants are nice they are out of context.
It raises these issues in a dramatic and involving way without ever becoming 'simplistic' and is well worth seeing.
Admittedly, this is a 'simplistic' analogy, but it captures the essence of the issue.
Perhaps I am being a tad 'simplistic' here, obviously there's the issue of passive smoking.
It was lame, it was dumb, and it was 'simplistic' , but we loved it if only because it was something that we were doing with a friend.
It is 'simplistic' to treat strategic choice just as the logical comparison of strategic options.
He believes that this 'simplistic' art form came into being only to develop the aesthetic sense.
This is probably a 'simplistic' take on the importance of the issue by both parties.
I know that sounds 'simplistic' , but it's hard to describe in more complex terms!
It's an overly 'simplistic' label, one that has stopped us wanting to open up her box and see what's really inside.
There is a lot of paradoxes, and a 'simplistic' judgment can be very badly wrong.
Quantum mechanics contradicts the notion of real only if one takes a naive, 'simplistic' view of reality.
The research is an attempt to move away from 'simplistic' polarisation and address the more complex issues.
Yet it would appear even that even this explanation is too 'simplistic' .
For, even by his 'simplistic' hypothesis, it is difficult to tell in which half Floyd lies.
Thus, in the same week, he can offer two stunningly 'simplistic' views of social complexity.
Yet surely poetry in a world as richly diverse as ours need not be so rigidly and 'simplistically' categorized.
Truth cannot be 'simplistically' derived from observation of the external world.
The term ‘national identity’ is 'simplistically' defined as the identification of a distinctive character and assignment of this identification to a collective group of people as a whole.
An outsider might 'simplistically' equate this action with a straightforward crackdown on democratic aspirations for political freedom.
However, teachers often interpret caring 'simplistically' as solely creating positive interpersonal relationships.
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