pragmatic

pronunciation

How to pronounce pragmatic in British English: UK [præɡˈmætɪk]word uk audio image

How to pronounce pragmatic in American English: US [præɡˈmætɪk] word us audio image

  • Adjective:
    concerned with practical matters
    of or concerning the theory of pragmatism
    guided by practical experience and observation rather than theory

Word Origin

pragmatic
pragmatic: [16] The base *prak-, which produced Greek praktós (source of English practice), also lies behind Greek prágma ‘deed, affair’. From this was derived pragmatikós ‘skilled in affairs’, which passed into English via late Latin pragmaticus.=> practice
pragmatic (adj.)
1610s, "meddlesome, impertinently busy," short for earlier pragmatical, or else from Middle French pragmatique (15c.), from Latin pragmaticus "skilled in business or law," from Greek pragmatikos "fit for business, active, business-like; systematic," from pragma (genitive pragmatos) "a deed, act; that which has been done; a thing, matter, affair," especially an important one; also a euphemism for something bad or disgraceful; in plural, "circumstances, affairs" (public or private), often in a bad sense, "trouble," literally "a thing done," from stem of prassein/prattein "to do, act, perform" (see practical). Meaning "matter-of-fact" is from 1853. In some later senses from German pragmatisch.

Example

1. The idea is pragmatic and smart .
2. Israel needs to recover its pragmatic zionism .
3. But the official attitude is pragmatic at best .
4. It also encourages a pragmatic rebooting of those relations .
5. Yet mr abe has also retained a pragmatic former rival , shigeru ishiba , as the party 's secretary-general .

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