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pragmatic
CIDE DICTIONARY
pragmatic, a. [L. pragmaticus busy, active, skilled in business, especially in law and state affairs, systematic, Gr. , fr. a thing done, business, fr. to do: cf. F. pragmatique. See Practical.].
- Of or pertaining to business or to affairs; of the nature of business; practical; material; businesslike in habit or manner. [1913 Webster]"The next day . . . I began to be very pragmatical." [1913 Webster]"We can not always be contemplative, diligent, or pragmatical, abroad; but have need of some delightful intermissions." [1913 Webster]"Low, pragmatical, earthly views of the gospel." [1913 Webster]
- Busy; specifically, busy in an objectionable way; officious; fussy and positive; meddlesome. Sir W. Scott. [1913 Webster]"The fellow grew so pragmatical that he took upon him the government of my whole family." [1913 Webster]
- Philosophical; dealing with causes, reasons, and effects, rather than with details and circumstances; -- said of literature. [1913 Webster]
pragmatic, n.
- One skilled in affairs. [1913 Webster]"My attorney and solicitor too; a fine pragmatic." [1913 Webster]
- A solemn public ordinance or decree. [1913 Webster]"A royal pragmatic was accordingly passed." [1913 Webster]
OXFORD DICTIONARY
pragmatic, adj.
1 dealing with matters with regard to their practical requirements or consequences.
2 treating the facts of history with reference to their practical lessons.
3 hist. of or relating to the affairs of a State.
4 (also pragmatical) a concerning pragmatism. b meddlesome. c dogmatic.
1 dealing with matters with regard to their practical requirements or consequences.
2 treating the facts of history with reference to their practical lessons.
3 hist. of or relating to the affairs of a State.
4 (also pragmatical) a concerning pragmatism. b meddlesome. c dogmatic.
Idiom
pragmatic sanction hist. an imperial or royal ordinance issued as a fundamental law, esp. regarding a question of royal succession.
Derivative
pragmaticality n. pragmatically adv.
Etymology
LL pragmaticus f. Gk pragmatikos f. pragma -matos deed
THESAURUS
pragmatic
Cyrenaic, Eleatic, Epicurean, Megarian, Stoic, advantageous, animist, animistic, appropriate, atomistic, balanced, banausic, beneficial, commodious, commonsense, cool, coolheaded, cosmotheistic, down-to-earth, earthy, eclectic, effective, effectual, efficient, empirical, employable, eudaemonistic, existential, expedient, feasible, fitting, functional, good for, hard, hard-boiled, hardheaded, hedonic, hedonist, hedonistic, helpful, humanist, humanistic, idealistic, instrumentalist, levelheaded, logical, materialistic, matter-of-fact, mechanistic, metaphysical, monistic, naturalistic, nominalist, of general utility, of help, of service, of use, operable, panlogistical, pantheistic, philosophical, positivist, positivistic, practicable, practical, practical-minded, pragmatical, pragmatist, proper, rational, rationalistic, realist, realistic, realizable, reasonable, sane, scholastic, scientific, scientistic, secular, sensationalistic, sensible, serviceable, sober, sober-minded, sound, sound-thinking, straight-thinking, syncretistic, theistic, transcendentalist, transcendentalistic, unideal, unidealistic, unromantic, unsentimental, useful, utilitarian, vitalistic, voluntarist, voluntaristic, well-balanced, workable, worldlyFor further exploring for "pragmatic" in Webster Dictionary Online