English to Urdu Dictionary adversarial

adversarial

معاندانہ
definition
adjective
industry and government had an adversarial relationship
involving or characterized by conflict or opposition.
example
‘This issue needs to be looked at given the 'adversarial' nature of compensation claims,’ Dr Reilly said.
Such is the nature of our 'adversarial' democratic structures.
We have an 'adversarial' system where evidence needs to be tested under cross-examination, so if we're going to put somebody behind bars, you need to establish charges beyond reasonable doubt.
I think there is an 'adversarial' relationship within the sports journalism business.
The Convention drew up a list of principles to guide the Parliament, including the aim to move away from the 'adversarial' nature of Westminster and towards a model based on power-sharing and public participation.
The inquiry we are conducting is inquisitorial, and it is not, by character or nature, 'adversarial' .
The organization is intended to be inquisitorial, as opposed to 'adversarial' .
With shared goals, there is less reason for conflict or 'adversarial' relationships.
Creating an 'adversarial' relationship with the listener is a mistake.
The thing about questions like this is that they presuppose an 'adversarial' relationship with clients, and that's so not the case with me.
It seems to me, one ought to be looking at these central authorities as something other than the 'adversarial' party.
I wouldn't call it an 'adversarial' relationship.
In an 'adversarial' system of justice, however, judges are expected to crib from the arguments, ideas, and research of the adversaries.
Families engaged in contentious, highly 'adversarial' , and prolonged conflict before and during divorce often remain embattled afterward as well.
In this tradition, a single judge both investigates and decides a case without benefit of an 'adversarial' trial.
This is not good for the health of our democracy, since it often casts civil society in an 'adversarial' relationship to the State.
This is an 'adversarial' relationship both ways, in which the media control more weapons of destruction than any minister, and use them with reckless passion or amusement, whether to make a headline or dismantle a career.
However, calling attention to the basic differences between the two fields does not mean they are opposites, nor necessarily 'adversarial' in relationship.
If the parties fail to achieve a settlement through the collaborative law approach, the parties may then pursue 'adversarial' court proceedings.
She has obviously had an 'adversarial' relationship with the media for a long time.
Being 'adversarial' is not about creating enemies or escalating hostilities, but is a way to develop the dynamic conditions from which people learn to respect each other.
In the 'adversarial' system at the beginning of trial proceedings the court asks the defendant whether he pleads guilty or not guilty.
But what surprised me most about the meeting was a general agreement that the biggest turn-off was the 'adversarial' nature of the campaigning.
They have a much more 'adversarial' relationship with government than we do.
It has never had an 'adversarial' relationship with the government.
Williams insisted there had been no 'adversarial' relationship between the ministry and the nurses.
But it is one thing to air such differences in a framework of constructive give-and-take and another to escalate differences of opinion into an 'adversarial' relationship.
Working for opposing stations the two men relished the jokey 'adversarial' relationship they shared - one which continues until today.
We have an 'adversarial' relationship with them.
That is, only a dominant group finds it advantageous to settle conflicts in an 'adversarial' way.
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