Blog Archive

Showing posts with label vocabulary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vocabulary. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 2, 2020

COMPROMISE

 In any relationship, you have to make compromises.

COMPROMISE

 

compromise
n
အေပးအယူလုပ္ျခင္း။ ညိွျခင္း။ (အေပးအယူနည္းျဖင့္ ညိွနိႈင္းရရိွေသာ) သေဘာတူညီခ်က္။
compromise
v
အေပးအယူလုပ္သည္။ ညိွသည္။ အစြပ္အစဲြ ၊ အေျပာ အဆိုခံရသည္။ ယံုမွားမကင္းခံရသည္။ ေလွ်ာ႔ေပးသည္။ အထိခိုက္ခံသည္။
 
 
  • [countable] an agreement made between two people or groups in which each side gives up some of the things they want so that both sides are happy at the end After lengthy talks the two sides finally reached a compromise. In any relationship, you have to make compromises. a compromise solution/agreement/candidate
  • [countable] compromise (between A and B) a solution to a problem in which two or more things cannot exist together as they are, in which each thing is reduced or changed slightly so that they can exist together This model represents the best compromise between price and quality.
  • [uncountable] the act of reaching a compromise Compromise is an inevitable part of life. There is no prospect of compromise in sight.
  • See compromise in the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary
     

    Sunday, November 29, 2020

    fla·grant

     fla·grant

    /ˈflāɡrənt/
    adjective
    1. (of something considered wrong or immoral) conspicuously or obviously offensive.
      "a flagrant violation of the law"
      Similar:
      blatant
      glaring
      obvious
      overt
      evident
      conspicuous
      naked

    Details on the attack remain slim

    there are "serious indications" of Israeli involvement.
    Sophia Ankel
    Former CIA director John Brennan speaks during a forum on election security titled, “2020 Vision: Intelligence and the U.S. Presidential Election” at the National Press Club in Washington, U.S., October 30, 2019. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts
    Former CIA director John Brennan speaks during a forum on election security in Washington DC, on October 30, 2019. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts
    • Former CIA Director John Brennan has condemned the assassination of a top Iranian nuclear scientist on Friday, calling it "criminal" and "highly reckless."

    • Brennan, who served between 2013 and 2017, also said he did not know who was to blame for the killing but that it "would be a flagrant violation of international law."

    • Details on the attack remain slim but Iran's foreign minister, Javad Zarif, pointed the finger at Israel on Friday, saying there are "serious indications" of Israeli involvement.

    • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

    Former CIA Director John Brennan has condemned a top Iranian nuclear scientist's reported assassination on Friday, calling it "criminal" and "highly reckless."

    Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, a former officer in Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), was killed in an ambush on his car on Friday while driving through Absard, a town located 50 miles outside the capital Tehran.

    This was a criminal act & highly reckless," Brennan tweeted on Friday afternoon. "It risks lethal retaliation & a new round of regional conflict."

    -

    Brennan, who served under the Obama administration, also said he did not know who was to blame for the killing but that it "would be a flagrant violation of international law."

    "I do not know whether a foreign government authorized or carried out the murder of Fakhrizadeh. Such an act of state-sponsored terrorism would be a flagrant violation of international law & encourage more governments to carry out lethal attacks against foreign officials," Brennan tweeted.

    twitter ( Iran’s foreign minister says there are “serious indications” of an Israeli role in the killing of a top Iranian nuclear scientist. Israel has declined to comment on the attack that has risked further raising tensions across the Mideast.)


    The reported assassination also came less than two weeks after the New York Times reported that President Trump had consulted senior advisors about the possibility of conducting a strike on Iran's main nuclear facility.



    condemned

     condemned

    /kənˈdemd/
    adjective
    1. 1.
      sentenced to a particular punishment, especially death.

    Friday, November 27, 2020

    humaneness & humanity

     

    humaneness; 
    benevolence.
    "he praised them for their standards of humanity, care, and dignity"
     
    The definition of humanity is the entire human race or the characteristics that belong uniquely to human beings, such as kindness, mercy and sympathy.
     
     An example of humanity is all the people in the world. An example of humanity is treating someone with kindness.